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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: East of Paris
+ Sketches in the Gâtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne
+
+Author: Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8734]
+This file was first posted on August 5, 2003
+Last Updated: November 1, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST OF PARIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Carlo Traverso, Debra Storr, Sandra Brown,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+SKETCHES IN THE GÂTINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE
+
+
+By Miss Betham-Edwards
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Chap.
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+I.--MELUN
+
+II.--MORET-SUR-LOING
+
+III.--BOURRON
+
+IV.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+V.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+VI.--LARCHANT
+
+VII.--RECLOSES
+
+VIII.--NEMOURS
+
+IX.--LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE
+
+X.--POUGUES
+
+XL.--NEVERS AND MOULINS
+
+XII.--SOUVIGNY AND SENS
+
+XIII.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE
+
+XIV.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--_continued_
+
+XV.--RHEIMS
+
+XVI.--RHEIMS--_continued_
+
+XVII.--SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE
+
+XVIII.--ST. JEAN DE LOSNE
+
+XIX.--NANCY
+
+XX.--IN GERMANISED LORRAINE
+
+XXI.--IN GERMANISED ALSACE
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+
+I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern
+France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French
+travel, no more than the _chefs-d’oeuvre_ of French literature, are
+unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing
+the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of
+Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as
+a wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their
+seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from “Notre Dame de
+Paris” or “Le Père Goriot,” to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so
+the sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of
+Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after
+the thundering Rhône. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes
+as we pic-nic on the Puy de Dôme. More fondly still my memory clings
+to many a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its
+vine-clad hills or of Autun as approached from Pré Charmoy, to me, the
+so familiar home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however,
+the natural marvels of France, like those of any other country, can be
+catalogued, French scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so,
+having visited, re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon
+on the European map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a
+veritable _embarras de richesses_. And many of the spots here described
+will, I have no doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to
+myself--_Larchant_ with its noble tower rising from the plain,
+recalling the still nobler ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the
+Sahara--_Recloses_ with its pictorial interiors and grand promontory
+overlooking a panorama of forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked
+by a single sail--_Moret_ with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows
+which of the two being the more attractive--_Nemours_, favourite haunt
+of Balzac, memoralized in “Ursule Mirouët”--_La Charité_, from
+whose old-world dwellings you may throw pebbles into the broad blue
+Loire--_Pougues_, the prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented
+by Mme. de Sévigné and valetudinarians of the Valois race generations
+before her time--_Souvigny_, cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast
+congeries of abbatial ruins--_Arcis-sur-Aube_, the sweet riverside home
+of Danton--its near neighbour, _Bar-sur-Aube_, connected with a bitterer
+enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great revolutionary himself, the
+infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace. These are a few of the
+sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I have returned again and
+again, ever finding “harbour and good company.” And these journeys, I
+should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once more to that sad
+yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French, to hearts as
+devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed provinces
+twenty years ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+MELUN
+
+Scores upon scores of times had I steamed past Melun in the Dijon
+express, ever eyeing the place wistfully, ever too hurried, perhaps too
+lazy, to make a halt. Not until September last did I carry out a long
+cherished intention. It is unpardonable to pass and re-pass any French
+town without alighting for at least an hour’s stroll!
+
+Melun, capital of the ancient Gatinais, now chef-lieu of the Department
+of Seine and Marne, well deserves a visit. Pretty as Melun looks from
+the railway it is prettier still on nearer approach. The Seine here
+makes a loop, twice curling round the town with loving embrace, its
+walls and old world houses to-day mirrored in the crystal-clear river.
+Like every other French town, small or great, Melun possesses its outer
+ring of shady walks, boulevards lying beyond the river-side quarters.
+The place has a busy, prosperous, almost metropolitan look, after the
+village just left. [Footnote: For symmetry’s sake I begin these records
+at Melun, although I halted at the place on my way from my third sojourn
+at Bourron.] The big, bustling Hotel du Grand Monarque too, with its
+brisk, obliging landlady, invited a stay. Dr. Johnson, perhaps the
+wittiest if the completest John Bull who ever lived, was not far wrong
+when he glorified the inn. “Nothing contrived by man,” he said, “has
+produced so much happiness (relaxation were surely the better word?) as
+a good tavern.” Do we not all, to quote Falstaff, “take our ease at our
+inn,” under its roof throwing off daily cares, assuming a holiday mood?
+
+A survey of the yard awoke another train of reflections. It really seems
+as if the invention of the motor car were bringing back ante-railway
+days for the tourist and the travelling world, recalling family coach
+and post-chaise. The place was crowded with motor cars of all shapes
+and sizes, some of these were plain, shabby gigs and carts of commercial
+travellers, others, landaus, waggonettes and victorias of rich folks
+seeing the world in their own carriage as their ancestors had done
+generations before; one turn-out suggested royalty or a Rothschild, I
+was about to say, rather I should name a Chicago store-keeper, since
+American millionaires are the Haroun-el-Raschids of the twentieth
+century. This last was a sumptuously fitted up carriage having a seat
+behind for servants, accommodating eight persons in all. There was
+also a huge box for luggage. It would be interesting to know how much
+petroleum, electricity, or alcohol such a vehicle would consume in a
+day. The manufacture of motor cars must be a very flourishing business
+in France, next, I should say, to that of bicycles. Of these also there
+was a goodly supply in the entrance hall of the inn, and the impetus
+given to travel by both motor car and bicycle was here self-evident.
+The Hotel du Grand Monarque literally swarmed with tourists, one and all
+French folks taking their ease at their inn. And our neighbours do not
+take their pleasure solemnly after the manner of the less impressionable
+English. Stay-at-home as they have hitherto been, home-loving as they
+essentially are, the atmosphere of an inn, the aroma of a holiday, fill
+the Frenchman’s cup of hilarity to overflowing, rendering gayer the
+gayest.
+
+The invention and rapidly spreading use of the motor car in France shows
+the French character under its revolutionary aspect, yet no people on
+the face of the earth are in many respects so conservative. We English
+folks want a new “Where is it?” for social purposes every year, the
+majority of our friends and acquaintances changing their houses almost
+as often as milliners and tailors change the fashion in bonnets and
+coats. A single address book for France supplies a life-time. The
+explanation is obvious. For the most part we live in other folks’ houses
+whilst French folks, the military and official world excepted, occupy
+their own. Revisit provincial gentry or well-to-do bourgeoisie after
+an interval of a quarter of a century, you always find them where they
+were. Interiors show no more change than the pyramids of Egypt. Not so
+much as sixpence has been laid out upon new carpets or curtains. Could
+grandsires and granddames return to life like the Sleeping Beauty, they
+would find that the world had stood still during their slumber.
+
+Melun possesses perhaps one of the few statues that may not be called
+superfluous, and I confess I had been attracted thither rather by
+memories of its greatest son than by its picturesque scenery and fine
+old churches. The first translator of Plutarch into his native tongue
+was born here, and as we should expect, has been worthily commemorated
+by his fellow citizens. A most charming statue of Amyot stands in front
+of the grey, turreted Hôtel de Ville. In sixteenth century doctoral
+dress, loose flowing robes and square flat cap, sits the great
+scholiast, as intently absorbed in his book as St. Jerome in the
+exquisite canvas of our own National Gallery.
+
+Behind the Hôtel de Ville an opening shows a small, beautifully kept
+flower garden, just now a blaze of petunias, zinnias, and a second crop
+of roses. Long I lingered before this noble monument, one only of the
+many raised to Amyot’s memory, of whom Montaigne wrote:--
+
+“Ignoramuses that we are, we should all have been lost, had not this
+book (the translation of Plutarch) dragged us out of the mire; thanks to
+it, we now venture to write and to discourse.”
+
+And musing on the scholar and his kindred, a favourite line of
+Browning’s came into my mind--
+
+“This man decided not to live but to know.”
+
+Indeed the whole of “A Grammarian’s Funeral” were here appropriate. Is
+it not men after this type of whom we feel
+
+ “Our low life was the level’s and the night’s.
+ He’s for the morning”?
+
+To my surprise I found the church of St. Aspais locked. A courteous
+hair-dresser thereupon told me that all churches in Melun were closed
+from noon till half past one, but that, as noon had only just struck,
+if I were brisk I might possibly catch the sacristan. After a pretty hot
+chase I succeeded in finding a deaf, decrepit, dingy old man who showed
+me round the church, although evidently very impatient for his mid-day
+meal. He informed me that this closing of churches at Melun had been
+necessitated of late years by a series of robberies. From twelve till
+half past one o’clock no worshippers are present as a rule, hence the
+thieves’ opportunity. Unfortunately marauders do not strip beautiful
+interiors of the tinselly gew-gaws that so often deface them; in this
+respect, however, St. Aspais being comparatively an exception. Alike
+within and without the proportions are magnificent, and the old stained
+glass is not marred by modern crudities. I do not here by any means
+exhaust the sights of this ancient town, from which, by the way,
+Barbizon is now reached in twenty minutes, an electric tramway plying
+regularly between Melun and that famous art pilgrimage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+MORET-SUR-LOING.
+
+The valley of the Loing abounds in captivating spots, Moret-sur-Loing
+bearing the palm. Over the ancient town, bird-like broods a majestic
+church, as out-spread wings its wide expanse of roof, while below by
+translucent depths and foliage richly varied, stretch quarters old and
+new, the canal intersecting the river at right angles. Lovely as is the
+river on which all who choose may spend long summer days, the canal to
+my thinking is lovelier still. Straight as an arrow it saunters between
+avenues of poplar, the lights and shadows of wood and water, the
+sunburnt, stalwart barge folk, their huge gondoliers affording endless
+pictures. Hard as is undoubtedly the life of the rope tower, rude as
+may appear this amphibious existence, there are cheerful sides to the
+picture. Many of these floating habitations possess a fireside nook cosy
+as that of a Parisian concierge, I was never tired of strolling along
+the canal and watching the barge folk. One day a friend and myself found
+a large barge laden with coal at the head of the canal, the huge dark
+framework and its sombre burden lighted up with touches of grace and
+colour. At the farther end of the vessel was hung a cage of canaries, at
+the other end was a stand of pot-flowers, geraniums and petunias in full
+bloom and all the more brilliant by virtue of contrast. A neighbour
+of the bargeman, a bright, intelligent woman, brown as a gipsy but
+well-spoken and of tidy appearance, invited us to enter. Imagine the
+neatest, prettiest little room in the world, parlour, bedchamber and
+kitchen in one, every object so placed as to make the most of available
+space. On a small side-table--and of course under such circumstances
+each article must be sizable--stood a sewing machine, in the corner was
+a bedstead with exquisitely clean bedding, in another a tiny cooking
+stove. Vases of flowers, framed pictures and ornamental quicksilver
+balls had been found place for, this bargewoman’s home aptly
+illustrating Shakespeare’s adage--“Order gives all things view.” The
+brisk, weather-beaten mistress now came up, no little gratified by our
+interest and our praises.
+
+“You ladies would perhaps like to make a little journey with me?” she
+asked, “nothing easier, we start to-morrow morning at six o’clock for
+Nevers, you could take the train back.”
+
+Never perhaps in our lives had myself and my companion received an
+invitation so out of the way, so bewilderingly tempting! And we felt
+too, with a pang, that never again in all probability should we receive
+such another. But on this especial day we were not staying at Moret,
+only running over for the afternoon from our headquarters at Bourron.
+Acceptance was thus hemmed round with small impediments. And by way
+of consolation, next morning the glorious weather broke. A downpour
+recalling our own lakeland would anyhow have kept us ashore.
+
+“Another time then!” had said the kind hostess of the barge at parting.
+She seemed as sorry as ourselves that the little project she had mooted
+so cordially could not be carried out.
+
+The Loing canal joins the Seine at Saint Mammes, a few kilomètres lower
+down, continuing its course of thirty kilomètres to Bleneau in the
+Nièvre. Canal life in Eastern France is a characteristic feature, the
+whole region being intersected by a network of waterways, those _chemins
+qui marchent_, or walking roads as Michelet picturesquely calls them.
+And strolling on the banks of the canal here you may be startled by
+an astonishing sight, you see folks walking, or apparently walking, on
+water. Standing bolt upright on a tiny raft, carefully maintaining their
+balance, country people are towed from one side to the other.
+
+These suburban and riverside quarters are full of charm. The soft reds
+and browns of the houses, the old-world architecture and romantic sites,
+tempt an artist at every turn. And all in love with a Venetian existence
+may here find it nearer home.
+
+A few villas let furnished during the summer months have little lawns
+winding down to the water’s edge and a boat moored alongside. Thus their
+happy inmates can spend hot, lazy days on the river.
+
+Turning our backs on the canal, by way of ivy-mantled walls, ancient
+mills and tumbledown houses, we reach the Porte du Pont or Gate of the
+Bridge. With other towns of the period, Moret was fortified. The girdle
+of walls is broken and dilapidated, whilst firm as when erected in the
+fourteenth century still stand the city gates.
+
+Of the two the Porte du Pont is the least imposing and ornamental, but
+it possesses a horrifying interest. In an upper storey is preserved one
+of those man-cages said to have been invented for the gratification of
+Louis XI, that strange tyrant to whose ears were equally acceptable the
+shrieks of his tortured victims and the apt repartee of ready-witted
+subjects.
+
+“How much do you earn a day?” he once asked a little scullion, as
+incognito he entered the royal kitchen.
+
+“By God’s grace as much as the King,” replied the lad; “I earn my bread
+and he can do no more.”
+
+So pleased was the King with this saying that it made the speaker’s
+fortune.
+
+We climb two flights of dark, narrow stone stairs reaching a bare
+chamber having small apertures, enlargements of the mere slits formerly
+admitting light and air. The man-cage occupies one corner. It is made of
+stout oaken ribs strongly bound together with iron, its proportions just
+allowing the captive to lie down at full length and take a turn of two
+or three steps. De Commines tells us that the cage invented by Cardinal
+Balue, and in which he languished for eleven years, was narrower still.
+An average sized man could not stand therein upright.
+
+The bolts and bars are still in perfect order. Nothing more brings home
+to us the abomination of the whole thing than to see the official draw
+these Brobdingnagian bolts and turn these gigantic keys. The locksmith’s
+art was but too well understood in those days. By whom and for whom this
+living tomb was made or brought hither local records do not say.
+
+From a stage higher up a magnificent panorama is obtained, Moret, old
+and new, set round with the green and the blue, its greenery and bright
+river, far away its noble aqueduct, further still looking eastward
+the valley of the Loing spread out as a map, the dark ramparts of
+Fontainebleau forest half framing the scene.
+
+The town itself is a trifle unsavoury and unswept. Municipal authorities
+seem particularly stingy in the matter of brooms, brushes and
+water-carts. Such little disagreeables must not prevent the traveller
+from exploring every corner. But the real, the primary attraction of
+Moret lies less in its historic monuments and antiquated streets than
+in its _chemins qui marchent_, its ever reposeful water-ways. Like most
+French towns Moret is linked with English history. Its fine old church
+was consecrated by Thomas à-Becket in 1166. Three hundred years later
+the town was taken by Henry V., and re-taken by Charles VII. a decade
+after. Not long since five hundred skulls supposed to have been those
+of English prisoners were unearthed here; as they were all found massed
+together, the theory is that the entire number had surrendered and been
+summarily decapitated, methods of warfare that have apparently found
+advocates in our own day.
+
+Most visitors to Paris will have had pointed out to them the so-called
+“Maison François Premier” on the Cour La Reine. This richly ornate and
+graceful specimen of Renaissance architecture formerly stood at Moret,
+and bit by bit was removed to the capital in 1820. A spiral stone
+staircase and several fragments of heraldic sculpture were left behind.
+Badly placed as the house was here, it seems a thousand pities that
+Moret should have thus been robbed of an architectural gem Paris could
+well have spared.
+
+My first stay at Moret three years ago lasted several weeks. I had
+joined friends occupying a pretty little furnished house belonging
+to the officiating Mayor. We lived after simplest fashion but to our
+hearts’ content. One of those indescribably obliging women of all work,
+came every day to cook, clean and wait on us. Most of our meals were
+taken among our flower beds and raspberry bushes. The only drawback to
+enjoyment may at first sight appear unworthy of mention, but it was not
+so. We had no latchkey. Now as every-one of all work knows, they are
+constantly popping in and out of doors, one moment they are off to
+market, the next to warm up their husbands’ soup, and so on and so on.
+As for ourselves, were we not at Moret on purpose to be perpetually
+running about also? Thus it happened that somebody or other was always
+being locked out or locked in; either Monsieur finding the household
+abroad had pocketed the key and instead of returning in ten minutes’
+time had lighted upon a subject he must absolutely sketch then and
+there; or Madame could not get through her shopping as expeditiously as
+she had hoped; or their guest returned from her walk long before she
+was due; what with one miscalculation and another, now one of us had to
+knock at a neighbour’s door, now another effected an entrance by means
+of a ladder, and now the key would be wholly missing and for the time
+being we were roofless, as if burnt out of house and home. Sometimes we
+were locked in, sometimes we were locked out, a current “Open Sesame” we
+never had.
+
+But no “regrettable incidents” marred a delightful holiday. Imbroglios
+such as these only leave memories to smile at, and add zest to
+recollection.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+BOURRON.
+
+Two years ago some Anglo-French friends joyfully announced their
+acquisition of a delightful little property adjoining Fontainebleau
+forest. “Come and see for yourself,” they wrote, “we are sure that
+you will be charmed with our purchase!” A little later I journeyed to
+Bourron, half an hour from Moret on the Bourbonnais line, on arriving
+hardly less disconcerted than Mrs. Primrose by the gross of green
+spectacles. No trim, green verandahed villa, no inviting vine-trellised
+walk, no luxuriant vegetable garden or brilliant flower beds greeted my
+eyes; instead, dilapidated walls, abutting on these a peasant’s cottage,
+and in front an acre or two of bare dusty field! My friends had indeed
+become the owners of a dismantled bakery and its appurtenances, to the
+uninitiated as unpromising a domain as could well be imagined. But
+I discovered that the purchasers were wiser in their generation than
+myself. Noticing my crestfallen look they had said:--
+
+“Only wait till next year, and you will see what a bargain we have made.
+You will find us admirably housed and feasting on peaches and grapes.”
+
+True enough, twelve months later, I found a wonderful transformation.
+That a substantial dwelling now occupied the site of the dismantled
+bakery was no matter for surprise, the change out of doors seemed
+magical. Nothing could have looked more unpromising than that stretch
+of field, a mere bit of waste, your feet sinking into the sand as if you
+were crossing the desert. Now, the longed-for _tonnelle_ or vine-covered
+way offered shade, petunias made a splendid show, choice roses scented
+the air, whilst the fruit and vegetables would have done credit to a
+market-gardener. Peaches and grapes ripened on the wall, big turnips and
+tomatoes brilliant as vermilion took care of themselves. It was not only
+a case of the wilderness made to blossom as the rose, but of the horn
+of plenty filled to overflowing, prize flowers, fruit and vegetables
+everywhere. For the soil hereabouts, if indeed soil it can be called,
+and the climate of Bourron, possess very rare and specific qualities. On
+this light, dry sand, or dust covering a substratum of rock, vegetation
+springs up all but unbidden, and when once above ground literally takes
+care of itself. As to climate, its excellence may be summed up in
+the epithet, anti-asthmatic. Although we are on the very hem of forty
+thousand acres of forest, the atmosphere is one of extraordinary
+dryness. Rain may fall in torrents throughout an entire day. The sandy
+soil is so thorough an absorbent that next morning the air will be as
+dry as usual.
+
+This house reminded me of a tiny side door opening into some vast
+cathedral. We cross the threshold and find ourselves at once in the
+forest, in close proximity moreover to its least-known but not least
+majestic sites. We may turn either to right or left, gradually climbing
+a densely wooded headland. The first ascent lands us in an hour on the
+Redoute de Bourron, the second, occupying only half the time, on a
+spur of the forest offering a less famous but hardly less magnificent
+perspective, nothing to mar the picture as a whole, sunny plain, winding
+river and scattered townlings looking much as they must have done to
+Balzac when passing through three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+This eastern verge of the Fontainebleau forest is of especial beauty;
+the frowning headlands seem set there as sentinels jealously guarding
+its integrity, on the watch against human encroachments, defying time
+and change and cataclysmal upheaval. Boldly stands out each wooded crag,
+the one confronting the rising, the other the sinking sun, behind both
+massed the world of forest, spread before them as a carpet, peaceful
+rural scenes.
+
+I must now describe a spot, the name of which will probably be new to
+all excepting close students of Balzac. The great novelist loved the
+valley of the Loing almost as fondly as his native Touraine; and if
+these pastoral scenes did not inspire a _chef d’oeuvre_, they have
+thereby immensely gained in interest. “Ursule Mirouët,” of which I shall
+have more to say further on, is not to be compared to such masterpieces
+as “Eugénie Grandet.” But a leading incident of “Ursule Mirouët” occurs
+at Bourron--a sufficient reason for recalling the story here.
+
+The beauty of our village, like the beauty of French women, to quote
+Michelet, “is made up of little nothings.” There are a hundred and
+one pretty things to see but very few to describe. Who could wish it
+otherwise? Little nothings of an engaging kind better agree with us
+as daily fare than the seven wonders of the world. With forty thousand
+acres of forest at our doors we do not want M. Mattel’s newly discovered
+underground river within reach as well.
+
+From our garden we yet look upon scenes not of every day. Those sweeps
+of bluish-green foliage strikingly contrasted with the brilliant vine
+remind us that we are in France, and in a region with most others having
+its specialities. Asparagus, not literally but figuratively, nourishes
+the entire population of Bourron. Everyone here is a market gardener on
+his own account, and the cultivation of asparagus for the Paris markets
+is a leading feature of local commerce.
+
+There is no more graceful foliage than that of this plant, and
+gratefully the eye rests upon these waves of delicate green under a
+blazing, grape-ripening sky. Making gold-green lines between are vines,
+a succession of asparagus beds and vineyards separating our village from
+its better known and more populous neighbour, Marlotte. In the opposite
+direction we see brown-roofed, white-walled houses surmounted by a
+pretty little spire. This is Bourron. To reach it we pass a double row
+of homesteads, rustic interiors of small farmer or market gardener,
+the one, as our French neighbours say, more picturesque than the other.
+Each, no matter how ill kept, is set off by an ornamental border,
+zinnias, begonias, roses and petunias as obviously showing signs of care
+and science. Oddly enough the finest display of flowers often adorns
+the least tidy premises. And oddly enough, rather perhaps as we should
+expect it, in not one, but in every respect, this French village is the
+exact opposite of its English counterpart. In England every tenant of
+a cottage pays rent, there, not an inhabitant, however poor, but sits
+under his own vine and his own fig-tree. In England the farm-house faces
+the road and the premises lie behind. Here manure-heap, granary and pig
+styes open on the highway, the dwellings being at the back. In England
+a man’s home, called his castle, is no more defended than the Bedouin’s
+tent. Here at nightfall the small peasant proprietor is as securely
+entrenched within walls as a feudal baron in his moated château. In
+England ninety-nine householders out of a hundred are perpetually
+changing their domicile. Here folks live and die under the paternal
+roof that has sheltered generations. Nor does diversity end with
+circumstances and surroundings. As will be seen in another chapter,
+habits of life, modes of thought and standards of duty show contrasts
+equally marked.
+
+Bourron possesses twelve hundred and odd souls, most of whom are
+peasants who make a living out of their small patrimony. Destined
+perhaps one day to rival its neighbour Marlotte in popularity--even
+to become a second Barbizon--it is as yet the sleepiest, most
+rustic retreat imaginable. The climate would appear to be not only
+anti-asthmatic but anti-everything in the shape of malady. Anyhow,
+if folks fall ill they have to send elsewhere for a doctor. Minor
+complaints--cuts, bruises and snake bites--are attended to by a
+Fontainebleau chemist. Every day we hear the horn of his messenger who
+cycles through the village calling for prescriptions and leaving drugs
+and draughts.
+
+A post office, of course, Bourron possesses, but let no one imagine
+that a post office in out of the way country places implies a supply of
+postage stamps. English people are the greatest scribblers by post in
+the world, whilst our wiser French neighbours appear to be the laziest.
+An amusing dilemma had occurred here just before my arrival. One day my
+friends applied to the post office for stamps, but none were to be had
+for love or money. Off somebody cycled to Marlotte, which possesses not
+only a post and telegraph, but a money order office as well--same
+reply, next the adjoining village of Grez was visited and with no better
+result--“Supplies have not yet reached us from headquarters,” said the
+third postmistress.
+
+Perhaps instead of smiling contemptuously we should take a moral to
+heart. The amount of time, money, eyesight and handcraft expended among
+ourselves on letter writing so-called is simply appalling. Was it
+not Napoleon who said that all letters if left unanswered for a month
+answered themselves? Too many Englishwomen spend the greater portion
+of the day in what is no longer a delicate art, but mere time-killing,
+after the manner of patience, games of cards and similar pastimes.
+
+Bourron is a most orderly village; within its precincts liberty is not
+allowed to degenerate into licence. As in summer-time folks are fond of
+spending their evenings abroad, a municipal law has enforced quiet after
+ten o’clock. Thus precisely on the stroke of ten, alike café, garden,
+private summer-house or doorstep are deserted, everyone betakes himself
+indoors, leaving his neighbours to enjoy unbroken repose. A most
+salutary by-law! Would it were put in force throughout the length and
+breadth of France! At Chatouroux I have been kept awake all night by
+the gossip of a _sergeant de ville_ and a lounger close to my window. At
+Tours, La Châtre and Bourges my fellow-traveller and myself could get
+no sleep on account of street revellers, whilst at how many other places
+have not holiday trips been spoiled by unquiet nights? All honour then
+to the aediles of dear little Bourron!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued_.
+
+Forty thousand acres of woodland at one’s doors would seem a fact
+sufficiently suggestive; to particularize the attractions of Bourron
+after this statement were surely supererogation. Yet, for my own
+pleasure as much as for the use of my readers, I must jot down one or
+two especially persistent memories, impressions of solemnity, beauty and
+repose never to be effaced.
+
+Of course it is only the cyclist who can realise such an immensity as
+the Fontainebleau forest. From end to end these vast sweeps are now
+intersected by splendid roads and by-roads. Old-fashioned folks, for
+whom the horseless vehicle came too late, can but envy wheelmen and
+wheelwomen as they skim through vista after vista, outstripping one’s
+horse and carriage as a greyhound outstrips a decrepit poodle. On the
+other hand only inveterate loiterers, the Lazy Lawrences of travel,
+can appreciate the subtler beauties of this woodland world. There
+are certain sights and sounds not to be caught by hurried observers,
+evanescent aspects of cloud-land and tree-land, rock and undergrowth,
+passing notes of bird and insect, varied melodies, if we may so express
+it, of summer breeze and autumn wind--in fine, a dozen experiences
+enjoyed one day, not repeated on the next. The music of the forest is
+a quiet music and has to be listened for, hardly on the cyclist’s ear
+falls the song or rather accompaniment of the grasshopper, “the Muse of
+the wayside,” a French poet has so exquisitely apostrophized.
+
+One’s forest companion should be of a taciturn and contemplative turn.
+Only thus can we drink in the sense of such solitude and immensity;
+realizing to the full what indeed these words may mean, he may wander
+for hours without encountering a soul, very few birds are heard by the
+way, but the hum of the insect world, that dreamy go-between, hardly
+silence, hardly to be called noise, keeps us perpetual company, and our
+eyes must ever be open for beautiful little living things. Now a green
+and gold lizard flashes across a bit of grey rock, now a dragon-fly
+disports its sapphire wings amid the yellowing ferns or purple ling,
+butterflies, white, blue, and black and orange, flit hither and
+thither, whilst little beetles, blue as enamel beads, enliven the mossy
+undergrowth.
+
+One pre-eminent charm indeed of the Fontainebleau forest is this wealth
+of undergrowth, bushes, brambles and ferns making a second lesser
+thicket on all sides. In sociable moods delightful it is to go
+a-blackberrying here. I am almost tempted to say that if you want
+to realise the lusciousness of a hedgerow dessert you must cater for
+yourself in these forty thousand acres of blackberry orchard.
+
+But the foremost, the crowning excellence of Fontainebleau forest
+consists in its variety. France itself, the “splendid hexagon,” with its
+mountains, rivers and plains, is hardly more varied than this vast area
+of rock and woodland. We can choose between sites, savage or idyllic,
+pastoral or grandiose, here finding a sunny glade, the very spot for a
+picnic, there break-neck declivities and gloomy chasms. The magnificent
+ruggedness of Alpine scenery is before our eyes, without the awfulness
+of snow-clad peaks or the blinding dazzle of glacier. In more than one
+place we could almost fancy that some mountain has been upheaved and
+split asunder, the clefts formed by these gigantic fragments being now
+filled with veteran trees.
+
+The formation of the forest has puzzled geologists, to this day the
+origin of its rocky substratum remaining undetermined.
+
+Within half an hour’s stroll of Bourron lies the so-called “Mare aux
+Fées” or Fairies’ Mere, as sweet a spot to boil one’s kettle in as
+holiday makers can desire, at the same time affording the best possible
+illustration of what I have just insisted upon. For this favourite
+resort is in a certain sense microcosmic, giving in miniature those
+characteristics for which the forest is remarkable. Smooth and sunny as
+a garden plot is the open glade wherein we now halt for tea, and while
+the kettle boils we have time for a most suggestive bird’s eye view. It
+is a little world that we survey from the borders of this rock-hemmed,
+forest-girt lake, one perspective after another with varying gradations
+of colour making us realize the many-featured, chequered area spread
+before us. From this coign of vantage are discerned alike the sterner
+and the more smiling beauties of the forest, rocky defiles, gloomy
+passes, sunlit lawns and mossy dells, scenery varied in itself and
+yet varying again with the passing hour and changing month. And such
+suggestion of almost infinite variety is not gained only from the
+Fairies’ Mere. From a dozen points, not the same view but the same kind
+of view may be obtained, each differing from the other, except in charm
+and immensity. Within a walk of home also stands one of the numerous
+monuments scattered throughout the forest. The Croix de Saint Hérem, now
+a useful landmark for cyclists, has a curious history. It was erected in
+1666 by a certain Marquis de Saint-Hérem, celebrated for his ugliness,
+and centuries later was the scene of the most extraordinary rendezvous
+on record. Here, in 1804, every detail having been theatrically arranged
+beforehand, took place the so-called chance meeting of Napoleon and Pope
+Pius VII. The Emperor had arranged a grand hunt for that day, and in
+hunting dress, his dogs at his heels, awaited the pontiff by the cross
+of Saint Hérem. As the pair lovingly embraced each other the Imperial
+horses ran away; this apparent escapade formed part of the programme,
+and Napoleon stepped into the Pope’s carriage, seating himself on his
+visitor’s, rather his prisoner’s, right. A few years later another
+rencontre not without historic irony took place here. In 1816, Louis
+XVIII. received on this spot the future mother, so it was hoped, of
+French Kings, the adventurous Caroline of Naples, afterwards Duchesse de
+Berri.
+
+The crosses monuments of the forest are usefully catalogued in local
+guide-books, and many have historic associations. The most interesting
+of these--readers will excuse the Irish bull--is a monument that may be
+said never to have existed!
+
+The great Polish patriot Kosciusko spent the last fifteen years of his
+life in a hamlet near Nemours, and on his death the inhabitants of that
+and neighbouring villages projected a double memorial, in other words,
+a tiny chapel, the ruins of which are still seen near Episy, and a mound
+to be added to every year and to be called “La Montagne de Kosciusko,”
+ or Kosciusko’s mountain. Particulars of this generous and romantic
+scheme are preserved in the archives of Montigny. The inauguration
+of the mound took place on the ninth of October 1836. To the sound
+of martial music, drums and cannon, the first layers of earth were
+deposited, men, women and children taking part in the proceedings.
+A year later no less than ten thousand French friends of Poland with
+mattock and spade added several feet to Kosciusko’s mountain. But the
+celebration got noised abroad. Afraid of anti-Russian manifestations the
+government of Louis Philippe prohibited any further Polish fêtes. Thus
+it came about that, as I have said, the most interesting monument in the
+forest remains an idea. And all things considered, neither French nor
+English admirers of the exiled hero could to-day very well carve on the
+adjoining rock,
+
+ “And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell.”
+
+Some time or other the Russian Imperial pair may visit Fontainebleau,
+whilst an English tourist with _The Daily Mail_ in his pocket would
+naturally and sheepishly look the other way.
+
+Another half hour’s stroll and we find ourselves in an atmosphere of
+art, fashion and sociability. Only a mile either of woodland, field path
+or high road separates Bourron from its more populous and highly popular
+neighbour, Marlotte. Here every house has an artist’s north window, the
+road is alive with motor cars, you can even buy a newspaper! Marlotte
+possesses a big, I should say comfortable, hotel, is very cosmopolitan
+and very pretty. Anglo-French households here, as at Bourron, favour
+Anglo-French relations. In Marlotte drawing-rooms we are in France,
+but always with a pleasant reminder of England and of true English
+hospitality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued._
+
+I will now say something about my numerous acquaintances at Bourron.
+After three summer holidays spent in this friendly little spot I can
+boast of a pretty large visiting list, the kind of list requiring no
+cards or ceremonious procedure. My hostess, a Frenchwoman, and myself
+used to drop in for a chat with this neighbour and that whenever we
+passed their way, always being cheerily welcomed and always pressed to
+stay a little longer.
+
+The French peasant is the most laborious, at the same time the most
+leisurely, individual in the world. Urgent indeed must be those
+farming operations that prevent him from enjoying a talk. Conversation,
+interchange of ideas, give and take by word of mouth, are as necessary
+to the Frenchman’s well-being as oxygen to his lungs.
+
+“Man,” writes Montesquieu, “is described as a sociable animal.” From
+this point of view it appears to me that the Frenchman may be called
+more of a man than others; he is first and foremost a man, since he
+seems especially made for society.
+
+Elsewhere the same great writer adds:--“You may see in Paris individuals
+who have enough to live upon for the rest of their days, yet they labour
+so arduously as to shorten their days, in order, as they say, to assure
+themselves of a livelihood.” These two marked characteristics are as
+true of the French peasant now-a-days as of the polite society described
+in the “Lettres Persanes.” In the eighteenth century cultivated people
+did little else but talk. Morning, noon and night, their epigrammatic
+tongues were busy. Conversation in historic salons became a fine
+art. There are no such literary côteries in our time. What with one
+excitement and another, the Parisian world chats but has no time for
+real conversation. Perhaps for _Gauloiseries_, true Gallic salt, we must
+now go to the unlettered, the sons of the soil, whose ancestors were
+boors when wit sparkled among their social superiors.
+
+Here are one or two types illustrating both characteristics, excellent
+types in their way of the small peasant proprietor hereabouts, a class
+having no counterpart or approximation to a counterpart in England.
+
+The first visit I describe was paid one evening to an old gardener whom
+I will call the Père A--. Bent partly with toil, partly with age,
+you would have at once supposed that his working days were well over,
+especially on learning his circumstances, for sole owner he was of the
+little domain to which he had now retired for the day. Of benevolent
+aspect, shrewd, every inch alive despite infirmities, he received his
+neighbour and her English guest with rustic but cordial urbanity, at
+once entering into conversation. With evident pride and pleasure he
+watched my glances at premises and garden, house and outbuildings
+ramshackle enough, even poverty-stricken to look at, here not an
+indication of comfortable circumstances much less of independent means;
+the bit of land half farm, half garden, however, was fairly well kept
+and of course productive.
+
+“Yes, this dwelling is mine and the two hectares (four acres four
+hundred and odd feet), aye,” he added self-complacently, “and I have a
+little money besides.”
+
+“Yet you live here all by yourself and still work for wages?” I asked.
+His reply was eminently characteristic. “I work for my children.” These
+children he told me were two grown up sons, one of them being like
+himself a gardener, both having work. Thus in order to hoard up a little
+more for two able-bodied young men, here was a bent, aged man living
+penuriously and alone, his only companion being a beautiful and
+evidently much petted donkey. I ventured to express an English view
+of the matter, namely, the undesirability of encouraging idleness and
+self-indulgence in one’s children by toiling and moiling for them in old
+age.
+
+He nodded his head.
+
+“You are right, all that you say is true, but so it is with me. I must
+work for my children.”
+
+And thus blindly are brought about the parricidal tragedies that Zola,
+Guy de Maupassant and other novelists have utilized in fiction, and
+with which we are familiarized in French criminal reports--parents and
+grandparents got rid of for the sake of their coveted hoardings.
+
+Thus also are generated in the rich and leisured classes that intense
+selfishness of the rising generation so movingly portrayed in M.
+Hervieu’s play, “La Course du Flambeau.” No one who has witnessed Mme.
+Réjane’s presentment of the adoring, disillusioned mother can ever
+forget it.
+
+On leaving, the Père A---- presented us with grapes and pears, carefully
+selecting the finest for his English visitor.
+
+At the gate I threw a Parthian dart.
+
+“Don’t work too hard,” I said, whereupon came the burden of his song:
+
+“One must work for one’s children.”
+
+This good neighbour could neither read nor write, a quite exceptional
+case in these days. Our second visit was made to a person similarly
+situated, but belonging to a different order.
+
+Madame B----, a widow, was also advanced in years and also lived by
+herself on her little property, consisting of walled-in cottage and
+outhouses, with straggling garden or rather orchard, garden and field in
+one.
+
+This good woman is what country folks in these parts call rich. I have
+no doubt that an English farmeress in her circumstances would have the
+neatest little parlour, a tidy maid to wait upon her, and most likely
+take afternoon tea in a black silk gown. Our hostess here wore the dress
+of a poor but respectable working woman. Her interior was almost as bare
+and primitive as that of the Boer farmhouse in the Paris Exhibition.
+Although between six and seven o’clock, there was no sign whatever of
+preparation for an evening meal. Indeed on every side things looked
+poverty-stricken. Not a penny had evidently been spent upon kitchen or
+bedrooms for years and years, the brick floor of both being bare, the
+furniture having done duty for generations.
+
+This “rentière,” or person living upon independent means, did not match
+her sordid surroundings. Although toil-worn, tanned and wrinkled, her
+face “brown as the ribbed sea-sand,” there was a certain refinement
+about look, speech and manner, distinguishing her from the good man her
+neighbour. After a little conversation I soon found out that she had
+literary tastes.
+
+“Living alone and finding the winter evenings long I hire books from a
+lending library at Fontainebleau,” she said.
+
+I opened my eyes in amazement. Seldom indeed had I heard of a peasant
+proprietor in France caring for books, much less spending money upon
+them.
+
+“And what do you read?” I asked.
+
+“Anything I can get,” was the reply. “Madame’s husband,” here she looked
+at my friend, “has kindly lent me several.”
+
+Among these I afterwards found had been Zola’s “Rome” and “Le Désastre”
+ by the brothers Margueritte.
+
+Like the Père A---- she had married children and entertained precisely
+the same notion of parental duty. The few sous spent upon such
+beguilement of long winter nights were most likely economized by some
+little deprivation. There is something extremely pathetic in this
+patriarchal spirit, this uncompromising, ineradicable resolve to hand
+down a little patrimony not only intact but enlarged.
+
+“Our peasants live too sordidly,” observed a Frenchman to me a day or
+two later. “They carry thrift to the pitch of avarice and vice. Zola’s
+‘La Terre’ is not without foundation on fact.”
+
+And excellent as is the principle of forethought, invaluable as is
+the habit of laying by for a rainy day, I have at last come to the
+conclusion that of the two national weaknesses, French avarice
+and English lavishness and love of spending, the latter is more in
+accordance with progress and the spirit of the age.
+
+In another part of the village we called upon a hale old body of
+seventy-seven, who not only lived alone and did everything for herself
+indoors but the entire work of a market garden, every inch of the two
+and a half acres being, of course, her own. Piled against an inner
+wall we saw a dozen or so faggots each weighing, we were told, half a
+hundredweight. Will it be believed that this old woman had picked up
+and carried from the forest on her back every one of these faggots? The
+poor, or rather those who will, are allowed to glean firewood in all the
+State forests of France. Let no tourist bestow a few sous upon aged men
+and women bearing home such treasure-trove! Quite possibly the dole may
+affront some owner of houses and lands.
+
+As we inspected her garden, walls covered with fine grapes, tomatoes and
+melons, of splendid quality, to say nothing of vegetables in profusion,
+it seemed all the more difficult to reconcile facts so incongruous. Here
+was a market gardener on her own account, mistress of all she surveyed,
+glad as a gipsy to pick up sticks for winter use. But the burden of her
+story was the same:
+
+“Il faut travailler pour ses enfants” (one must work for one’s
+children), she said.
+
+All these little farm-houses are so many homely fortresses, cottage and
+outhouses being securely walled in, a precaution necessary with aged,
+moneyed folks living absolutely alone.
+
+A fourth visit was paid to a charming old Philémon and Baucis, the best
+possible specimens of their class. The husband lay in bed, ill of an
+incurable malady, and spotlessly white were his tasselled nightcap,
+shirt and bedclothes. Very clean and neat too was the bedroom opening
+on to the little front yard, beneath each window of the one-storeyed
+dwelling being a brilliant border of asters. The housewife also was a
+picture of tidiness, her cotton gown carefully patched and scrupulously
+clean. This worthy couple are said to be worth fifty thousand francs.
+The wife, a sexagenarian, does all the work of the house besides
+waiting on her good man, to whom she is devoted, but a married son
+and daughter-in-law share her duties at night. Here was no touch of
+sordidness or suggestion of “La Terre,” instead a delightful picture of
+rustic dignity and ease. The housewife sold us half a bushel of pears,
+these two like their neighbours living by the produce of their small
+farm and garden.
+
+I often dropped in upon Madame B---- to whom even morning calls were
+acceptable.
+
+On the occasion of my farewell visit she had something pretty to
+say about one of my own novels, a French translation of which I had
+presented her.
+
+“I suppose,” I said, “that you have some books of your own?”
+
+“Here they are,” she said, depositing an armful on the table. “But I
+have never read much, and mostly _bibelots_” (trifles.)
+
+Her poor little library consisted of _bibelots_ indeed, a history of
+Jeanne d’Arc for children, and half a dozen other works, mostly school
+prizes of the kind awarded before school prizes in France were worth the
+paper on which they were printed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+LARCHANT.
+
+There is a certain stimulating quality of elasticity and crispness in
+the French atmosphere which our own does not possess. France, moreover,
+with its seven climates--for the description of these, see Reclus’
+Geography--does undoubtedly offer longer, less broken, spells of hot
+summer weather than the United Kingdom. But let me for once and for all
+dispel a widespread illusion. The late Lord Lytton, when Ambassador
+in Paris, used to say that in the French capital you could procure any
+climate you pleased. And experience proves that without budging an inch
+you may in France get as many and as rapid climatic changes as anywhere
+else under the sun. At noon in mid-May last I was breakfasting with
+friends on the Champs Elysées, when my hostess put a match to the fire
+and my host jumped up and lighted six wax candles. So dense had become
+the heavens that we could no longer see to handle knives and forks!
+Hail, wind, darkness and temperature recalled a November squall at home.
+Yet the day before I had enjoyed perfect summer weather in the Jardin
+d’Acclimitation. Invariableness is no more an attribute of the French
+climate than our own. Wherever we go we must take a change of dress, for
+all the world as if we were bound for the other side of the Tweed.
+
+My first Sunday at Bourron, on this third visit, was of perfect
+stillness, unclouded brilliance and southern languor, heralding, so we
+fondly imagined, the very morrow for an excursion.
+
+In the night a strong wind rose up, but as we had ordered a carriage for
+Larchant, and as carriages in these parts are not always to be had,
+as, moreover, grown folks no more than children like to defer their
+pleasure, off we set, two of the party on cycles forming a body guard.
+There seemed no likelihood of rain and in the forest we should not feel
+the wind.
+
+For the first mile or two all went well. Far ahead of us our cyclists
+bowled gaily along in the forest avenues, all of us being sheltered from
+the wind. It was not till we skirted a wide opening that we felt the
+full force of the tornado, soon overtaking our blowzed, dishevelled
+companions, both on foot and looking miserable enough.
+
+We re-entered the forest, and a little later, emerging from the fragrant
+depths of a pine wood, got our first view of Larchant, coming suddenly
+upon what looks like a cathedral towering above the plain, at its base
+a clustering village, whitewashed brown-roofed houses amid vineyards and
+orchards.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A grandiose view it is, recalling the minaret of Mansourah near Tclemcen
+in Algeria, that gigantic monolith apparently carved out of Indian gold
+and cleft in two like a pomegranate.
+
+Slowly we wound up towards the village, the wind, or rather hurricane,
+gathering in force as we went. It was indeed no easy task to get a
+nearer view of the church; more than once we were compelled to beat
+a retreat, whilst it seemed really unsafe to linger underneath such a
+ruin.
+
+Imagine the tower of St. Jacques in the Rue de Rivoli split in two,
+the upright half standing in a bare wind-swept level, and you have
+some faint notion of Larchant. On nearer approach such an impression of
+grandeur is by no means diminished. This magnificent parish church,
+in part a ruin, in part restored, rather grows upon one upon closer
+inspection. Reparation, for want of funds, has stopped short at the
+absolutely necessary. The body of the church has been so far restored as
+to be fit for use, but its crowning glory, the tower, remains a torso.
+
+The front view suggests no such dilapidation. How long will the shell
+of that lofty twelfth century tower remain standing? To my mind it hangs
+over the low, one-storeyed houses at its feet, a veritable sword of
+Damocles, sooner or later sure to fall with crushing force. The porch
+shows much beautiful carving, unfortunately defaced, and the interior
+some perfect specimens of pure Gothic arches, the whole whitewashed and
+bare as a barn.
+
+Larchant in the middle ages was a famous pilgrimage, and in the days of
+Charles IX. a halting stage on the road to Italy. It does not seem to
+attract many English pilgrims at the present time. Anyhow tea-making
+here seems a wholly unknown art. In a fairly clean inn, however, a
+good-natured landlady allowed us to make ourselves at home alike
+in kitchen and pantry. One of our party unearthed a time-honoured
+tea-pot--we had of course taken the precaution of carrying tea with
+us--one by one milk and sugar were forthcoming in what may be called
+wholesale fashion, milk-jugs and sugar-basins being apparently articles
+of superfluity, and in company of a charming old dog and irresistible
+kitten, also of some quiet wayfarers, we five-o’clocked merrily enough.
+
+Our business at Larchant was not wholly archaeological. Buffeted as we
+were by the hurricane, we managed to pay a visit in search of eggs and
+poultry for the table at home.
+
+If peasant and farming life in France certainly from time to time
+reminds us of Zola’s “La Terre,” we are also reminded of an aspect which
+the great novelist ignores. As will be seen from the following sketch
+sordidness and aspiration oft times, I am almost tempted to say, and
+most often, go hand in hand.
+
+We see one generation addicted to an existence so laborious and material
+as to have no counterpart in England; under the same roof growing up
+another, sharing all the advantages of social and intellectual progress.
+
+Not far from the church we called upon a family of large and wealthy
+farmers, owners of the soil they cultivate, millionaires by comparison
+with our neighbours at Bourron.
+
+We arrived in the midst of a busy time, a steam corn thresher plying in
+the vast farm-yard. The interior of the big, straggling farm-house we
+did not see, but two aged women dressed like poor peasants received
+us in the kitchen, a dingy, unswept, uninviting place, as are most
+farm-house kitchens in France. These old ladies were respectively
+mother-in-law and aunt of the farmer, whose wife, the real mistress of
+the house, soon came in. This tall, stout, florid, brawny-armed woman
+was evidently what French folks call _une maîtresse femme_, a first-rate
+housewife and manager; a somewhat awe-inspiring person she looked as she
+stood before us, arms akimbo, her short coarse serge skirt showing shoes
+well acquainted with stable and neat-house, one dirty blue cotton apron
+worn over another equally dirty. Now, my hostess, as I have said, wanted
+to purchase some poultry for the table, and here comes in the moral
+of my story. Vainly the lady begged and begged again for a couple of
+chickens. “But we want them for our Parisians,” the three farming women
+reiterated, one echoing the other. “Our Parisians, our Parisians,”
+ the words were repeated a dozen times. And as was explained to me
+afterwards, “our Parisians,” for whom the pick of the poultry yard
+was being reserved, were the two sons of the rather forbidding-looking
+matron before us, young gentlemen being educated in a Paris Lycée, and
+both of them destined for the learned professions!
+
+This side of rural life, this ambition, akin to what we see taking
+quite another form among ourselves, Zola does not sufficiently realize.
+Shocking indeed were the miserliness and materialism of such existences
+but for the element of self-denial, this looking ahead for those to
+follow after. How differently, for instance, the farm-house and its
+group must have appeared, but for the evident pride and hopes centred in
+_nos Parisiens_, who knows?--perhaps youths destined to attain the first
+rank in official or political callings!
+
+The farther door of the smoke-dried kitchen opened on to the farm-yard,
+around which were stables and neat-houses. In the latter the mistress
+of the house proudly drew our attention to a beautiful blue cow, grey
+in our ignorance we had called it, one of a score or more of superb kine
+all now reclining on their haunches before being turned out to pasture.
+In front, cocks and hens disported themselves on a dunghill, whilst
+beyond, the steam corn thresher was at work, every hand being called
+into requisition. No need here for particulars and figures. The
+superabundant wealth, so carefully husbanded for the two youths in
+Paris, was self-evident.
+
+The tornado, with threatening showers and the sight of a huge tree just
+uprooted by the road side, necessitated the shortest possible cut home.
+In fair weather a prolongation of our drive would have given us a sight
+of some famous rocks of this rocky forest. But we carried home memories
+enough for one day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+RECLOSES.
+
+This ancient village, reached by the forest, is one of the most
+picturesque of the many picturesque places hereabouts. Quitting a
+stretch of pinewood we traverse flat cultivated land, gradually winding
+up towards a long straggling village surmounted by a lofty church tower
+of grey stone. On either side of this street are enclosed farm-houses,
+the interiors being as pictorial as can be imagined. Untidy as are most
+French homesteads, for peasant farmers pay little court to the Graces,
+there is always a bit of flower garden. Sometimes this flower garden
+is aerial, a bower of roses on the roof sometimes amid the incongruous
+surroundings of pig styes or manure heaps. This region is a petunia
+land; wherever we go we find a veritable blaze of petunia blossoms, pale
+mauve, deepest rose, purple and white massed together without order or
+view to effect. In one of the little fortresses--for so these antique
+farmhouses may be called--we saw a rustic piazza, pillars and roof of
+rude unhewn stone blazing with petunias, no attempt whatever at making
+the structure whole, symmetrical or graceful to the eye. It seems as if
+these homely though rich farmers, or rather farmers’ wives, could not do
+without flowers, above the street jutting many aerial gardens, the only
+touch of beauty in the work-a-day picture. These interiors would supply
+artists with the most captivating subjects. The women, their skins brown
+and wrinkled as ripe, shelled walnuts, their head-dress a blue and white
+kerchief neatly folded and knotted, the expression of their faces shrewd
+and kindly, all contribute to the charm of the scene.
+
+Here as elsewhere the young women and girls affect a little fashion and
+finery on Sundays.
+
+We should not know unless we were told that Recloses was one of the
+richest villages in these parts. On this Sunday, September 1st, 1901, in
+one place a steam thresher was at work, although for the most part
+folks seemed to be taking their ease in their holiday garb. Perhaps the
+difficulty of procuring the machine accounted for the fact of seeing it
+on a Sunday.
+
+One of the farm-yards showed a charming menagerie of poultry and the
+prettiest rabbits in the world, all disporting themselves in most
+amicable fashion. Here, as elsewhere, when we stopped to admire, the
+housewife came out, pleased to interchange a few words with us. The
+sight of Recloses is not, however, its long line of little walled-in
+farm-houses, but the curious rocky platform at the end of the village,
+perforated with holes always full of water, and the stupendous view
+thence obtained--an ocean of sombre green unrelieved by a single sail.
+
+Already the vast panorama of forest shows signs of autumn, light touches
+of yellow relieving the depths of solemn green. On such a day of varied
+cloudland the perspective must be quite different, and perhaps even more
+beautiful than under a burning cloudless sky, no soft gradations between
+the greens and the blues. The little pools or perforations breaking
+the surface of the broad platform, acres of rocks, are, I believe,
+unexplained phenomena. In the driest season these openings contain
+water, presumably forced upwards from hidden springs. The pools, just
+now covered with green slime, curiously spot the grey surface of the
+rocks.
+
+If, leaving the world of forest to our right, we continue our journey
+in the direction of Chapelle la Reine, we overlook a vast plain the
+population of which is very different from that of the smiling fertile
+prosperous valley of the Loing. This plain, extending to Étampes and
+Pithiviers, might, I am told, possibly have suggested to Zola some
+scenes and characters of “La Terre.” A French friend of mine, well
+acquainted with these parts, tells me that at any rate there, if
+anywhere, the great novelist might have found suggestions for such a
+work. The soil is arid, the cultivation is primitive in the extreme and
+the people are rough and uncouth. The other day an English resident at
+Marlotte, when cycling among these villages of the plain inquired his
+way of a countryman.
+
+“You are not a Frenchman?” quoth the latter before giving the desired
+information.
+
+“No I am not” was the reply.
+
+“You are not an American?”
+
+“No, I am an Englishman.”
+
+“Ah!” was the answer, “I smelt you out sure enough” (_Je vous ai bien
+senti_). Whereupon he proceeded to put the wayfarer on his right road.
+
+As a rule French peasants are exceedingly courteous to strangers, but
+these good people of the plain seldom come in contact with the tourist
+world, their country not being sufficiently picturesque even to attract
+the cyclist.
+
+The curious thirteenth-century church of Recloses had long been an art
+pilgrimage. It contains, or at least should contain, some of the most
+wonderful wood carvings in France; figures and groups of figures
+highly realistic in the best sense of the word. These sculptures,
+unfortunately, we were not able to inspect a second time; exhibited in
+the Paris Exhibition they had not yet been replaced.
+
+It is a beautiful drive from Recloses to Bourron by the Croix de Saint
+Hérem. A little way out of the village we came upon a pretty scene,
+people, in family groups, playing croquet under the trees. Dancing also
+goes on in summer as in the olden time. It was curious as we drove along
+to note the behaviour of my friend’s dog: it never for a moment closed
+its eyes, and yet there was nothing to look at but avenue after avenue
+of trees. What could the little animal find so fascinating in the
+somewhat monotonous sight? A friend at home assures me that a pet of her
+own enjoyed drives from purely snobbish motives; his great gratification
+arising from the sense of superiority over fellow dogs compelled to
+trudge on foot. But in these woodland solitudes there was no room for
+such a sentiment, not a dog being visible, only now and then a cyclist
+flashing by.
+
+There is no more splendid cycling ground in the world than this forest
+of Fontainebleau.
+
+Shakespeare says:--
+
+ “This guest of summer,
+ The temple-haunting martlet, does approve
+ By his loved mansionry that the heaven’s breath
+ Smells wooingly here: no jutty frieze, buttress,
+ Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made
+ His pendent bed, and procreant cradle: Where they
+ Most breed and haunt, I have observed the air
+ Is delicate.”
+
+About this time at Bourron the village street was alive with swallows
+preparing, I presume, for departure southwards. A beautiful sight it
+was to see these winged congregations evidently concerting their future
+movements.
+
+Another feature to be mentioned is the number of large handsome moths
+frequenting these regions. One beautiful creature as large as a swallow
+used to fly into our dining room every evening for warmth; fastening
+itself to the wall it would there remain undisturbed until the morning.
+
+I finish these reminiscences of Bourron by the following citation from
+Balzac’s “Ursule Mirouët”:--
+
+
+“On entering Nemours at five o’clock in the morning, Ursule woke up
+feeling quite ashamed of her untidiness, and of encountering Savinien’s
+look of admiration. During the time that the diligence took to come
+from Bouron (_sic_), where it stopped a few minutes, the young man had
+observed Ursule. He had noted the candour of her mind, the beauty of her
+person, the whiteness of her complexion, the delicacy of her features,
+the charm of the voice which had uttered the short and expressive
+sentence, in which the poor child said everything, while wishing to say
+nothing. In short I do not know what presentiment made him see in Ursule
+the woman whom the doctor had depicted, framed in gold, with these magic
+words:--‘Seven to eight hundred thousand francs!’”
+
+Holiday tourists in these parts cannot do better than put this
+love-story in their pockets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+NEMOURS.
+
+“Who knows Nemours,” wrote Balzac, “knows that nature there is as
+beautiful as art,” and again he dwells upon the charm of the sleepy
+little town memorialized in “Ursule Mirouët.”
+
+The delicious valley of Loing indeed fascinated Balzac almost as much as
+his beloved Touraine.
+
+As his recently published letters to Madame Hanska have shown us,
+several of his greatest novels were written in this neighbourhood,
+whilst in the one named above we have a setting as striking as that of
+“Eugenie Grandet” or “Béatrix.” A ten minutes’ railway journey brings
+us to Nemours, one of the few French towns, by the way, in which Arthur
+Young lost his temper. Here is his own account of the incident:--
+
+“Sleep at Nemours, where we met with an innkeeper who exceeded in
+knavery all we had met with, either in France or Italy: for supper,
+we had a _soupe maigre_, a partridge and a chicken roasted, a plate of
+celery, a small cauliflower, two bottles of poor _vin du Pays_, and a
+dessert of two biscuits and four apples: here is the bill:--Potage
+1 liv. 10f.--Perdrix 2 liv. 10f.--Poulet 2 liv.--Céleri 1 liv.
+4f.--Choufleur 2 liv.--Pain et dessert 2 liv.--Feu et appartement 6
+liv.--Total 19 liv. 8f. Against so impudent an extortion we remonstrated
+severely but in vain. We then insisted on his signing the bill, which,
+after many evasions, he did, _à l’étoile, Foulliare_. But having
+been carried to the inn, not as the star, but the _écu de France_, we
+suspected some deceit: and going out to examine the premises, we found
+the sign to be really the _écu_, and learned on enquiry that his own
+name was Roux, instead of _Foulliare_: he was not prepared for this
+detection, or for the execration we poured on such infamous conduct; but
+he ran away in an instant and hid himself till we were gone. In justice
+to the world, however, such a fellow ought to be marked out.”
+
+I confess I do not myself find such charges excessive. From a very
+different motive, Nemours put me as much out of temper as it had done
+my great predecessor a hundred years before. Will it be believed that a
+town memorialized by the great, perhaps _the_ greatest, French novelist,
+could not produce its title of honour, in other words a copy of “Ursule
+Mirouët”?
+
+This town of 4,000 and odd souls and chef-lieu of department does not
+possess a bookseller’s shop. We did indeed see in a stationer’s window
+one or two penny books, among these an abridged translation of “Uncle
+Tom’s Cabin.” But a friendly wine merchant, who seemed to take my
+reproaches very much to heart, assured us that in the municipal library
+all Balzac’s works were to be found, besides many valuable books dealing
+with local history.
+
+Cold comfort this for tourists who want to buy a copy of the Nemours
+story! As we stroll about the grass-grown streets, we feel that
+railways, telephones and the rest have very little changed Nemours since
+Balzac’s descriptions, written three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+The sweet and pastoral surroundings of the place are in strong contrast
+with the sordid next-of-kin peopling the pages of his romance. Beyond
+the fine old church of rich grey stone, you obtain as enchanting a
+view as the valley of the Loing can show, a broad, crystal-clear river
+winding amid picturesque architecture, richest and most varied foliage,
+ash and weeping willow mingling with deeper-hued beech and alder. It is
+difficult, almost impossible, to describe the charm of this riverside
+scenery. In one passage of his novel, Balzac compares the view to the
+scenery of an opera, and in very truth every feature forms a whole so
+harmonious as to suggest artistic arrangement.
+
+Nature and accident have effected the happiest possible combination
+of wood, water and building stone. Nothing is here to mar the complete
+picture. Grandly the cathedral-like church and fine old château stand
+out to-day against the brilliant sky, soft grey stone and dark brown
+making subdued harmonies. Formerly Nemours was surrounded by woods,
+hence its name. People are said to attain here a very great age, life
+being tranquil and the nature of the people somewhat lethargic.
+
+Amongst the more energetic inhabitants are a lady dentist and her
+sister, who between them do a first rate business.
+
+French peasants never dream of indulging in false teeth; such an idea
+would never enter the head of even the richest. But an aching tooth
+interferes with the labours of the farm, and must be got rid of at
+any cost. This young lady _chirurgien et dentiste_, such is the name
+figuring on her door plate, is not only most expert in using the
+forceps, but is attractive and pretty.
+
+Her charges are two francs for a visit or operation; in partnership
+with her is a sister who does the accounts, and as nuns and sisters
+of charity unprovided with certificates are no longer allowed to draw
+teeth, act as midwives and cut off limbs, country doctors and dentists
+of either sex have now a fair chance.
+
+No town in this part of France suffered more during the German invasion.
+The municipal authorities had at first decided upon making a bold stand,
+thus endeavouring to check the enemy’s advance on Paris. Differences
+of opinion arose, prudential counsels prevailed, and it was through a
+mistaken order that a Prussian detachment was attacked near the town.
+The consequences were appalling. The station was burned to the ground,
+enormous contributions in money and material were exacted from the town,
+some of the authorities were made to travel on the railways with
+the invaders, and others were carried off to remote fortresses of
+Brandenburg and there kept as prisoners for nine months.
+
+The account of all these incidents, written by a victim, may be
+consulted in a volume of the town library.
+
+If people frequently attain the age of a hundred in Nemours, as I was
+assured, it is rather due to placid temperament than to intellectual
+torpor. The town possesses learned societies, and a member of its
+archaeological association has published a book of great local interest
+and value, viz:--“Nemours, Temps Géologiques, Temps Préhistoriques,
+Temps Historiques, par E. Doigneau, Membre de la Société Archéologique
+de Seine-et-Marne, Ancien Vice Président de la section de Fontainebleau,
+Paris.”
+
+Strange to say, although this neighbourhood has offered a rich field for
+prehistoric research, Nemours as yet possesses no museum, I do verily
+believe the first French town of any size I have ever found in France
+without one at least in embryo. For the cyclist the run from Bourron
+to Nemours is delightful, on the hottest day in the year spinning along
+broad well-wooded roads, with lovely perspectives from time to time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE.
+
+From Bourron, in September, 1900, I journeyed with a friend to La
+Charité, a little town four hours off.
+
+It is ever with feelings of pleasurable anticipation that I approach
+any French town for the first time. The number of these, alas! now being
+few, I have of late years been compelled to restrain curiosity, leaving
+one or two dreamed-of spots for the future, saying with Wordsworth:--
+
+ “Should life be dull and spirits low,
+ ‘Twill soothe us in our sorrow,
+ That earth has something yet to show,
+ The bonny holms of Yarrow.”
+
+La Charité, picturesque of the picturesque--according to French
+accounts, English, we have none--for many years had been a Yarrow to me,
+a reserve of delight, held back from sheer Epicureanism.
+
+As, on the 12th of September, the cumbersome old omnibus rattled over
+the unpaved streets, both to myself and fellow traveller came a feeling
+of disenchantment. We had apparently reached one more of those sleepy
+little _chefs-lieux_ familiar to both, places of interest certainly, the
+sleepiest having some architectural gem or artistic treasure. But here
+was surely no Yarrow!
+
+A few minutes later we discovered our error. Hardly had we reached our
+rooms in the more than old-fashioned Hôtel du Grand Monarque, than from
+a side window, we caught sight of the Loire; so near, indeed, lay the
+bright, blue river, that we could almost have thrown pebbles into its
+clear depths; quitting the hotel, half a dozen steps, no more were
+needed, an enchanting scene burst upon the view.
+
+Most beautiful is the site of La Charité, built terrace-wise, not on the
+skirts but on the very hem of the Loire, here no revolutionary torrent,
+sweeping away whole villages, leaving only church steeples visible above
+the engulfing waters, as I had once seen it at Nantes, but a broad,
+smooth, crystal expanse of sky-blue. Over against the handsome stone
+bridge to-day having its double in the limpid water, we see a little
+islanded hamlet crowned with picturesque church tower; and, placing
+ourselves midway between the town and its suburban twin, obtain vast and
+lovely perspectives. Westward, gradually purpling as evening wears on,
+rises the magnificent height of Sancerre, below, amid low banks bordered
+with poplar, flowing the Loire. Eastward, looking towards Nevers, our
+eyes rest on the same broad sheet of blue; before us, straight as
+an arrow, stretches the French road of a pattern we know so well, an
+apparently interminable avenue of plane or poplar trees. The river is
+low at this season, and the velvety brown sands recall the sea-shore
+when the tide is out. Exquisite, at such an hour are the reflections,
+every object having its mirrored self in the transparent waves, the
+lights and shadows of twilight making lovely effects.
+
+As is the case with Venice, La Charité should be reached by river, and a
+pity it seems that little steamers do not ply between all the principal
+towns on the Loire. How enchanting, like the immortal Vert-Vert, of
+Gresset’s poem, to travel from Nevers to the river’s mouth!
+
+If I had headed this paper merely with the words “La Charité,” I should
+surely be supposed to treat of some charitable institution in France,
+or of charity as worked out in the abstract, for this first of Christian
+virtues has given the place its name, presumably perpetuating the
+charitableness of its abbatial founders. Just upon two thousand years
+ago, some pious monks of the order of Cluny settled here, calling their
+foundation La Charité. Gradually a town grew around the abbey walls, and
+what better name for any than this? So La Charité it was in early feudal
+times, and La Charité it remains in our own.
+
+The place itself is as antiquated and behindhand as any I have seen in
+France, which is saying a good deal. A French gentleman, native of
+these parts, told me that in his grandfather’s time our Hôtel du Grand
+Monarque enjoyed a fine reputation. In many respects it deserves the
+same still, excellent beds, good cooking, quietude and low prices not
+being so common as they might be in French provincial inns. The house,
+too, is curious, what with its spiral stone staircases, little passages
+leading to one room here, to another there--as if in former days
+travellers objected to walls that adjoined those of other people--and
+unaccountable levels, it is impossible to understand whether you were
+on the first floor or the second floor, house-top, or basement. Our
+bedrooms, for instance, reached by one of the spiral stone staircases
+just named never used by myself without apprehension, landed us on the
+edge of a poultry yard; I suppose a wide bit of roof had been converted
+into this use, but it was quite impossible to make out any architectural
+plan. These rooms adjoining this _basse-cour_, hens and chicks
+would enter unceremoniously and pick up the crumbs we threw to them.
+Fastidious tourists might resent so primitive a state of things, the
+hotel, I should say, remaining exactly what it was under the Ancien
+Régime. The beauty and interest of various kinds around, more than make
+up for small drawbacks. Here the archaeologist will not grudge several
+days. Ruined as it is, the ancient abbey may be reconstructed in the
+mind’s eye by the help of what we see before us. The fragments of
+crumbling wall, the noble tower and portal, the delicately sculptured
+pillars, cornices, and arches, enable us to build up the whole, just
+as Cuvier made out an entire skeleton from the examination of a single
+bone. These grand architectural fragments have not been neglected by the
+learned. Unfortunately, and exceptionally, La Charité possesses neither
+public library nor museum, but at Nevers the traveller would surely find
+a copy of Prosper Merimée’s “Notes Archéologiques” in which is a minute
+account of these.
+
+Alike without and within the ruins show a medley of styles and richest
+ornamentation.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The superb north-west tower, that forms so striking an object from the
+river, is said to be in the Burgundian style; rather should we put it
+after a Burgundian style, so varied and heterogeneous are the churches
+coming under this category. Again, the guide books inform us that
+the open space between this tower and the church was occupied by the
+narthex, a vast outer portico of ancient Burgundian churches used for
+the reception of penitents, catechumens, and strangers. All interested
+in ecclesiastical architecture should visit the abbey church of Vézelay,
+which possesses a magnificent narthex of two storeys, restored by the
+late Viollet le Duc. Vézelay, by the way, may be easily reached from La
+Charité.
+
+Next to the elaborate sculptures of this grand tower, will be noted the
+superb colour of the building stone, carved out of deep-hued gold it
+looks under the burning blue sky. And of a piece are arch, portico and
+column, one and all helping us to reconstruct the once mighty abbey,
+home of a brotherhood so powerful as to necessitate disciplinary
+measures on the part of the Pope.
+
+The interior of the church shows the same elaborateness of detail, and
+the same mixture of styles, the Romanesque-Burgundian predominating, so,
+at least, affirm authorities.
+
+The idler and lover of the picturesque will not find time hang heavy on
+his hands here. Very sweet are the riverside views, no matter on which
+side we obtain them, and the quaintest little staircases of streets run
+from base to summit of the pyramidally-built town. A climb of a quarter
+of an hour takes us to an admirable coign of vantage just above the
+abbey church, and commanding a view of Sancerre and the river. That
+little town, so splendidly placed, is celebrated for its eight months’
+defence as a Huguenot stronghold.
+
+La Charité, with most mediaeval towns, was fortified, one old city gate
+still remaining.
+
+To-day, as when that charming writer, Émile Montégut visited the
+place more than a generation ago, the townspeople ply their crafts and
+domestic callings abroad. In fine weather, no work that can possibly be
+done in the open air is done within four walls. Another curious feature
+of these engaging old streets, is the number of blacksmiths’ shops. It
+would seem as if all the horses, mules, and donkeys of the Nièvre were
+brought hither to be shod, the smithy fires keeping up a perpetual
+illumination.
+
+A third and still more noteworthy point is the infrequency--absence, I
+am inclined to say--of cabarets. Soberest of the sober, orderliest of
+the orderly, appear these good folks of La Charité, les Caritates as
+they are called, nor, apparently, has tradition demoralised them. One
+might expect that a town dedicated to the virtue of almsgiving would
+abound in beggars. Not one did we see.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+POUGUES.
+
+If an ugly name could kill a place, Pougues must surely have been ruined
+as a health resort centuries ago. Coming, too, after that soothing,
+harmoniously named La Charité, could any configuration of letters grate
+more harshly on the ear? Truth to tell, my travelling companion and
+myself had a friendly little altercation about Pougues. It seemed
+impossible to believe pleasant things of a town so labelled. But the
+reputation of Pougues dates from Hercules and Julius Caesar, both
+heroes, it is said, having had recourse to its mineral springs! Coming
+from legend to history, we find that Pougues, or, at least, the waters
+of Pougues, were patronised by the least objectionable son of Catherine
+de Medicis, Henri II. of France and runaway King of Poland. Imputing
+his disorders to sorcery, he was thus reassured by a sensible physician
+named Pidoux: “Sire, the malady from which you suffer is due to no
+witchcraft. Lead a quiet life for ten weeks, and drink the water of
+Pougues.” The best king France ever had, namely, the gay Gascon, and
+after him Louis XIII., by no means one of the worst, had recourse to
+Pougues waters; also that arch-voluptuary and arch-despot, the Sun-King,
+who imagined that even syntax and prosody must bow to his will.
+[Footnote: One day the young king ordered his carriage, saying, “_mon_
+carrosse,” instead of “_ma_ carrosse,” the French word being derived
+from the Italian feminine, _carrozza_. On being gently corrected, the
+king flew into a passion, declaring that masculine he had called it, and
+masculine it should remain, which it has done to this day, so the story
+runs. Let the Republic look to it!] And Madame de Sevigné--for whom,
+however, I have scant love, for did she not hail the revocation of the
+Edict of Nantes?--Madame de Sevigné honoured Pougues with an epigram.
+
+A second Purgatory she styled the douches, and, doubtless, in those
+non-washing days, a second Purgatory it would have been to most folks.
+
+To Pougues, nevertheless, we went, and if these notes induce the more
+enterprising of my countrypeople to do the same next summer, they are
+not likely to repent of the experiment. Never, indeed, was a little
+Eden of coolness, freshness, and greenery more abominably used by its
+sponsors, whilst the name of so many French townlings are a poem in
+themselves!
+
+From a view of sky blue waters and smooth brown sands we were
+transported to a world of emerald green verdure and richest foliage,
+interpenetrated with golden light. On this 14th of September the warmth
+and dazzlingness of mid-summer still reigned at Pougues; and the scenery
+in which we suddenly found ourselves, bosquets, dells, and glades, with
+all the charm but without the savageness of the forest, recalled the
+loveliest lines of the laziest poet:--
+
+ “Was naught around but images of rest,
+ And flowery beds, that slumberous influence kest[1],
+ Sleep-soothing groves and quiet lawns between,
+ From poppies breathed; and beds of pleasant green.”
+
+[Footnote 1: Cast]
+
+A drive of a few minutes had landed us in the heart of this little
+Paradise, baths and Casino standing in the midst of park-like grounds.
+Apparently Pougues, that is to say, the Pougues-les-Eaux of later
+days, has been cut out of natural woodland, the Casino gardens and
+its surroundings being rich in forest trees of superb growth and
+great variety. The wealth of foliage gives this new fashionable little
+watering-place an enticingly rural appearance, nor is the attraction
+of water wholly wanting. To quote once more a most quotable, if little
+read, poet:--
+
+ “Meantime, unnumbered glittering streamlets played,
+ And hurled everywhere their water’s sheen,
+ That, as they bickered through the sunny glade,
+ Though restless still, themselves a lulling murmur made.”
+
+A pretty little lake, animated with swans, varies the woodland scenery,
+and tropical birds in an aviary lend brilliant bits of colour. The
+usual accessories of a health resort are, of course, here--reading room,
+concert hall, theatre, and other attractions, rapidly turning the place
+into a lesser Vichy. The number and magnificence of the hotels, the
+villas and _cottages_, that have sprung up on every side, bespeak the
+popularity of Pougues-les-Eaux, as it is now styled, the surname adding
+more dignity than harmoniousness. One advantage Pougues possesses over
+its rivals, is position. At Aix-les-Bains, Plombières, Salins, and how
+many other inland spas, you are literally wedged in between shelving
+hills. If you want to enjoy wide horizons, and anything like a breeze,
+you must get well outside the town. Never in hot, dusty, crowded
+cities have I felt so half-suffocated as at the two first named places.
+Pougues, on the contrary, lies in a broad expanse of beautifully varied
+woodland and champaign, no more appropriate site conceivable for the now
+popular air-cure. “Pougues-les-Eaux, Cure d’Eau and Cure d’Air,” is
+now its proud title, folks flocking hither, not only to imbibe its
+delicious, ice-cold, sparkling waters, but to drink in its highly
+nourishing air. The iron-gaseous waters resemble in properties those of
+Spa and Vichy. From one to five tumblers are ordered a day, according
+to the condition of the drinker, a little stroll between each dose being
+advisable. With regard to the air-cure, visitors are reminded that at
+Pougues they find the four kinds of walking exercise recommended by a
+German specialist, namely, that on quite level ground; secondly, a
+very gradual climb; thirdly, a somewhat steeper bit of up-hill; and,
+fourthly, the really arduous ascent of Mont Givre. In order to entice
+health-seekers, all kinds of gratifications await them on the summit,
+restaurant, dairy, reading room, tennis court, and croquet ground, to
+say nothing of a panorama almost unrivalled in eastern France. We have,
+indeed, climbed the Eiffel Tower, in other words, are on a level with
+that final stage from which floats the Tricolour. Looking east we behold
+the sombre Morvan and Nevers rising above the Loire, whilst westward,
+beyond the plain and the Loire, may be descried the cathedral of
+Bourges. How many regions visited and revisited by myself now lie before
+my eyes as on a map--the Berri, Georges Sand’s country, the little
+Celtic kingdom of the Morvan, on the borders of which, for so many
+years, that charming writer, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, made his home;
+the Nivernais, with its souvenirs of Vert-Vert and Mazarin, or, rather,
+Mazarin and Vert-Vert, the Department of the Allier made from the
+ancient province of the Bourbonnais.
+
+A wanderer in France should never be without his Arthur Young. That
+“wise and honest traveller,” of course, had been before us, but
+travelling in a contrary direction. “From the hill that descends to
+Pougues,” he wrote on his way from Nevers to Fontainebleau, in 1790,
+“is an extensive view to the north, and after Pouilly a (_sic_) fine
+scenery, with the Loire doubling through it.” But the great farmer made
+this journey in mid-winter, thus missing its charm. And Arthur Young
+was ever too intent upon crops and roots to notice wild flowers. Had
+he traversed this region earlier in the year, he might have missed an
+exquisite feature, namely, the sweeps of autumn crocus. Just now the
+rich pastures around Pougues, as well as suburban lawns and wayside
+spaces, were tinted with delicate mauve, the ground being literally
+carpeted with these flowers. It was as if the lightest possible veil of
+pale purple covered the turf, the same profusion being visible on every
+side.
+
+One final word about this sweet and most unmusically named place. On no
+occasion and nowhere have I been received with more cordiality than
+at dear little Pougues, a place I was told there utterly ignored by my
+country people. I do honestly believe, indeed, that myself and fellow
+traveller were the first English folk to wander about those delicious
+gardens, and taste the incomparable waters, cool, sparkling,
+invigorating as those of Spa.
+
+One enterprising proprietor of an excellent hotel was so anxious to
+secure an English _clientèle_, the best _clientèle_ in the world, so
+hotel keepers aver, that she offered me a handsome percentage on any
+visitors I would send her. In the most delicate manner I could command,
+I gave her to understand that my inquiries about Pougues were not made
+from a business point of view, but that I should certainly proclaim its
+many attractions on the house-tops.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+NEVERS AND MOULINS.
+
+I found the well-remembered Hôtel de France much as I had left it, just
+upon twenty years before, every whit as quiet, comfortable, and moderate
+in price, indeed, one of the best provincial hotels of France. The dear
+old woman then employed as waitress, had, of course, long since gone
+to her rest, and the landlord and landlady were new to me. But, the
+traditions of an excellent house were evidently kept up, accommodation,
+meanwhile, having been greatly enlarged.
+
+A place is like a book; if worth knowing at all, to be returned to again
+and again. After the first brief visit so many years ago, I wrote,
+“I envy the traveller who for the first time stands on the bridge of
+Nevers.” And more imposing, more exhilarating still, seemed the
+view from the same spot now; under the brilliant sky, in the clear
+atmosphere, every feature standing out as in a mosaic proudly dominating
+all, the Cathedral, with its mass of sombre architecture; stretching
+wide to right and left, the gay, prosperous-looking city; white villas
+rising one above the other, hanging gardens and terraced lawns, making
+greenery and verdure in mid-air. On the occasion of my first visit in
+August, 1881, the Loire was so low as to appear a mere thread of palest
+blue amid white sands; at the time I now write of, broad and beautiful
+it flowed beneath the noble bridge, a deep twilight sky reflected in its
+limpid waters.
+
+How well I remember the first sight of this scene years ago! Then it was
+early morning of market day, and, pouring in from the country, I had
+met crowds of peasants with their products, the men in blue blouses, the
+women in neat white coiffes, some bearing huge baskets on their heads,
+others drawing heavily laden barrows, driving donkey-carts, the piled-up
+fruit and vegetables making a blaze of colour. For three sous I recorded
+the purchase of more wild strawberries, peaches, and greengages than I
+knew what to do with, each grower doing business on his own account, no
+middleman to share his profits; choicest fruit and vegetables to be had
+almost for the asking. On this lovely Sunday evening plenty of peasant
+folk were about, the men fishing in the Loire, the women minding their
+children under the trees. But I noted here, as elsewhere, a gradual
+disappearance of the blue blouse and white coiffe. Broadcloth and
+bonnets are fast superseding the homely, picturesque dress of former
+days.
+
+The aerial residences just mentioned are characteristic of riverside
+Nevers. Craning our necks as we strolled to and fro, we remarked how
+much life in such altitudes must resemble that of a balloon, folks
+being thus lifted above the hubbub, malodours, and microbes of the human
+bee-hive below. For my own part I prefer a turnpike level, despite the
+engaging aspect of those rose-girt verandahs, bowers, and lawns on a
+level with the cathedral tower.
+
+“Nevers makes a fine appearance, rising proudly from the Loire,” wrote
+Arthur Young, “but on the first entrance it is like a thousand other
+places.”
+
+But the indefatigable apostle of the turnip had no time for archaeology
+on his great tour, or he would have discovered that Nevers possesses
+more than one architectural gem of the first water. The cathedral
+certainly, alike without and within, must take rank after those of
+Chartres, Le Mans, Reims, and how many others! but the exquisite little
+church of St. Étienne and the Ducal Palace, are both perfect in their
+way, and will enchant all lovers of harmony and proportion. The first,
+another specimen of so-called Romanesque-Burgundian, has to be looked
+for, standing as it does in a kind of _cul de sac_; the second occupies
+a conspicuous site, forms, indeed, the centre-piece and crowning
+ornament of the town. Daintiest of the dainty, this fairy-like Italian
+palace in the heart of France, reminds us that once upon a time Nevers
+was the seat of Italian dukes, the last of whom was a nephew of Mazarin.
+The great Cardinal, “whose heart was more French than his speech,” and
+who served France so well, despite his nationality and his nepotism,
+having purchased the Nivernais of a Gonzague, finally incorporated it
+into the French crown in 1659.
+
+To this day, Nevers remains true to its Italian traditions. Go into the
+tiniest suburban street, enter the poorest little general shop, and you
+are reminded of the art that made the city famous hundreds of years ago,
+an art introduced by a Duke of Mantua, relation of Catherine de Medicis.
+It was in the sixteenth century, that this feudal lord of the Nivernais
+summoned Italian potters hither, among these a native of Faenza.
+Under his direction a manufactory of faïence was established, the ware
+resembling that of his native city, scriptural and allegorical subjects
+traced in manganese. The unrivalled blue glaze of Nevers is of later
+date. Just as Rouen potters were celebrated for their reds, the
+Nivernais surpassed them in blues. No French or foreign potters ever
+achieved an azure of equal depth and purity.
+
+The golden age of Nevers majolica belongs to that early period, but the
+highly ornamented faïence now produced in its ateliers, shows taste and
+finish, and in the town itself may be found charming things as cheap as,
+if not cheaper than, our commonest earthenware.
+
+As I write, I have before me some purchases made at a small general
+dealer’s, a plate, and two small amphora-shaped vases, costing a few
+sous each. The colouring of this cheap pottery is very harmonious, and
+the glaze remarkable for its brilliance. The shopwoman, with whom we
+had a pleasant chat, did not seem astonished at our admiration for her
+goods.
+
+“I sell lots of such things as you have just bought, to folks like
+you” _(de votre genre)_, she said, “strangers who like to carry away a
+souvenir of the place, and all my ware comes from the same manufacture.”
+
+To-day Nevers thrives upon ornamental majolica. A hundred and ten years
+ago it throve upon plates and dishes commemorating the Revolution. In
+the upper storey of the Ducal Palace we may read revolutionary annals in
+faïence, every event being memorialised by a piece of porcelain.
+
+Curious enough is this record in earthenware, one stormy day after
+another being thus commemorated; and perhaps more curious still is
+the evident care with which these fragile objects have been preserved.
+Throughout the Napoleonic era they might pass--had not gold pieces
+then on one side the portrait of “Napoleon Empereur,” on the obverse
+“République Français”?--but when Louis XVIII was brought back by his
+foreign friends, how was it that there came no general smashing, a great
+flinging of revolutionary potsherds to the dunghill? Safe enough now is
+the Nivernais collection, under the roof of the Ducal Palace, the
+rude designs and commonness of the ware strikingly contrasted with the
+exquisite things around.
+
+In close proximity to these cheap plates, dedicated to the Phrygian cap
+and sans-culottism, are the very choicest specimens of Nevers faïence of
+priceless value. Why the municipality, as a rule so generous towards the
+public, should thus inconveniently house its treasure, is inconceivable.
+
+The museum is reached by a long spiral staircase, without banister or
+support, and a false step must certainly result in a broken leg, or,
+perhaps, neck! The room also contains a striking portrait of Theodore de
+Bèze, the great French reformer, who, then an aged man, penned a letter,
+sublime in its force and simplicity, to Henry IV., conjuring him not
+to abandon the Protestant faith. The mention of this fact recalls an
+interesting experience. I here allude to the incontestable advance
+of Protestantism in France. The traveller whose acquaintance with the
+country began a quarter of a century ago, cannot fail to be impressed
+with this fact. Alike in towns large and small, new places of worship
+have sprung up, Nevers now possessing an Evangelical church. And good
+was it to hear the appreciation of the little Protestant community from
+my Catholic landlady.
+
+“Yes,” she said, “the Protestants here are worthy of all respect
+(_dignes gens_) and the pastor also; I esteem him much.” Evidently the
+Lemaitre-Coppée-Déroulède dictum, “Only the Catholic can be called a
+Frenchman,” is not accepted at Nevers.
+
+In dazzlingly brilliant weather, and amid glowing scenery, we continued
+our journey to Moulins, as we travelled by rail, and not by road unable
+to identify “the little opening in the road leading to a thicket” where
+Sterne discovered Maria. Has anyone ever identified the spot I wonder,
+poplar, small brook and the rest?
+
+Too soon were we also for “the heyday of the vintage, when Nature is
+pouring her abundance into everyone’s lap.” For the vintage, indeed,
+one must go farther. Sterne must have been thinking of Burgundy when he
+penned that line, or the phylloxera has brought about a transformation,
+vineyards here being changed into pastures. The scenery of the Allier,
+like that around Autun, recalls many parts of England. Meadows set
+around with hedges; little rises of green hill here and there; cattle
+browsing by quiet streams; just such pictures as we may see in our own
+Midlands. I well remember a remark of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton
+on this subject. We were strolling near his home, in the neighbourhood
+of Autun, one day, when he pointed to the landscape over against us.
+
+“How like that is to many an English scene,” he said; “and maybe it was
+the English aspect of this region that tempted me to settle here.” I had
+paid Moulins a hasty visit many years before, but, unlike Nevers and so
+many French towns, the _chef-lieu_ of the Allier does not improve upon
+further acquaintance. And I surmise, that such is the impression of my
+country people generally. English travellers must be few and far between
+at Moulins, or why should the appearance of two English ladies attract
+so much curiosity? Wherever we went, the good folks of Moulins, alike
+rich and poor, turned round to have a good look at us, even stopping
+short to stare. All this was done without any rudeness or remark, but
+such extraordinary behaviour can only be accounted for by the foregoing
+supposition. For some reason or other our compatriots do not, like
+Sterne and Maria go to Moulins.
+
+Why should an essentially aristocratic place be so ill-kept, not to say
+dirty? The town is no centre of industry. Tall factory chimneys do
+not disfigure its silhouette or blacken its walls. Handsome equipages
+enliven the streets. But the municipality, like certain saints of
+old, seem to have taken vows of perpetual uncleanliness. Alike the
+scavenger’s broom and the dust-cart appear to be unknown.
+
+Whilst a riverside walk at Nevers presents nothing but cheerful bustle
+and an aspect of prosperity, here you approach the Allier through scenes
+of squalor and torpid neglect. The poorer inhabitants, too, are very
+un-French in appearance, wanting that personal tidiness characteristic
+of their country people in general. An aristocratic place, means an
+Ultramontane place, and every third man you meet in Moulins wears a
+soutane. What so many curés, Jesuits and Christian Brothers can find to
+do passes the ordinary comprehension.
+
+However interesting twins may be in the human family, monumental duality
+is far from successful. Unfortunately for this delightfully picturesque
+old town, its graceful Cathedral has, in the grand new church of
+Sacre-Coeur, a double. But--
+
+ “As moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine,”
+
+is the second self, the never to be obliterated shadow of the first and
+far more beautiful church.
+
+Two towers of equal height, twice two spires like as cherries and
+in close juxtaposition rise above the town, an ensemble spoiling the
+symmetry of outline and general effect.
+
+How much better off was Moulins when, instead of four spires, she
+gloried in two? Then, of a verity, the city would have presented as
+noble a view as those of La Charité and Nevers from the Loire.
+
+The ancient château now used as a prison and the Jacquemart or clock
+tower are rare old bits of architecture, of themselves worth the journey
+to Moulins. Jacquemart, it may be here explained, is a corruption of
+Jacques Marques, the name of a famous Flemish clockmaker who lived in
+the fourteenth century. Amongst other achievements of this artist is
+the clock of Nôtre Dame, Dijon, as curious in its way as the still
+more celebrated cock-crowing time-piece of Strasburg, and declared
+by Froissart to be the wonder of Christendom. World-wide became the
+reputation of Jacques Marques, and thus it came about that clock towers
+generally were called after his masterpieces.
+
+On my former hurried visit to Moulins, as was the case with my
+predecessor, Arthur Young over a hundred years before, “other
+occupations” had “driven even Maria and the poplar from my head, and
+left me no room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.” In other words, I had
+visited Rome without seeing the Pope.
+
+On this second, and more leisurely visit, I had ample opportunity of
+making up for the omission. Truly, the tomb of the last Montmorency
+deserves a deliberate examination. It is one of the most sumptuous
+monuments in the world and as a testimony of wifely devotion worthy to
+be ranked with that of the Carian Queen to her lord, the Mausolus, whose
+name is perpetuated in the word mausoleum.
+
+French history cannot be at everyone’s fingers’ ends, so a word here
+about the last of the Montmorencys, victim not so much of Richelieu’s
+policy as of a kinsman’s meanness.
+
+When the dashing, devil-me-care, hitherto fortunate Henri de
+Montmorency, Marshal of France and Governor of Languedoc, plotted
+against Richelieu or rather against the Royal supremacy, it was mainly
+at the instigation of Gaston of Orleans. No more abject figure in French
+annals than this unworthy son of the great Gascon, Henri IV., thus
+portrayed by one whose tongue was as sharp as his sword: “Gaston of
+Orleans,” wrote Richelieu, “engaged in every enterprise because he had
+not the will to resist persuasion, dishonourably drawing back from want
+of courage to support his associates.”
+
+In the conspiracy of Montmorency, Gaston had played the part of
+instigator, leaving the other to his fate as soon as the situation
+became perilous. Every effort was made to save the duke, but in vain,
+and at the age of thirty-seven he ended a brilliant, adventuresome life
+on the scaffold at Toulouse.
+
+One thought was uppermost in my mind when, a few years ago, I visited
+that city, the only French city that welcomed the Inquisition. As I
+stood in the elegant Capitol, musing on Montmorency’s story, it occurred
+to me how few of us realise what a respecter of persons was French law
+under the ancien régime. Hard as seems the fate of this dashing young
+duke, we must remember what would have been his punishment, but for
+his titles of nobility. Death swift and sudden, in other words, by
+decapitation, was the choicest prerogative of the nobility; tortures
+before and after condemnation, breaking on the wheel, burning alive, and
+other hideous ends, being the lot of the people.
+
+This monument, so noteworthy alike from a historic and artistic point of
+view, was saved from destruction by ready wit. When, in the ferment of
+revolution, the iconoclastic spirit had got the upper hand, a citizen of
+Moulins met a mob, bent on destroying what they supposed to be the
+tomb of some hated grand seigneur, oppressor of the poor. Following the
+rabble to the convent, no sooner did he see the mallet and hammer raised
+than this worthy bourgeois, who himself deserves a monument, shouted,
+“Hands off, citizens! Yonder reposes no aristocrat, but as good a
+citizen as any man-jack of you, aye, who had the honour of losing his
+head for having conspired against a King.”
+
+The crowd melted away without a word, the monument remains intact, and
+generations have had bequeathed to them an example of what presence of
+mind may effect, not with nerve, sinew, or bodily prowess, but with
+the tongue. The Convent of the Visitation, to which Montmorency’s widow
+retired, and in the chapel of which she raised this memorial, is now
+converted into a Lycée. It is a handsome building and was built by
+Madame de Chantal, foundress of the Order of Visitadines, or nuns whose
+office it was to visit the sick. This pious lady, the friend of St.
+François de Sales, and herself canonised by Pope Benoît XIV., was the
+bosom friend of Felicia Orsini, Montmorency’s wife, who succeeded her as
+Superior of the convent on her death.
+
+But even an abbess, who had taken the veil, could not refuse visits,
+some of which must have been as a second entering of iron into this
+proud woman’s soul. The coward Gaston, when passing through Moulins,
+sought an interview. Richelieu, also, whose emissary received the
+following message: “Tell your master, that my tears reply for me and
+that I am his humble servant.” Years after, Louis XIV. visited the once
+beautiful and high-spirited Italian, now an aged abbess occupying a
+bare cell and from his lips, despot and voluptuary though he was, might
+always be expected the right word in the right place. “Madame,” he said,
+on taking leave, “we may learn something here. I need not ask you to
+pray for the King.”
+
+[Illustration: TOMB OF MONTMORENCY, MOULINS.]
+
+But interest in personalities is leading me from what I have set myself
+to describe, namely, portraiture in marble. For this magnificent work
+thus perpetuates the last of the Montmorencys and his wife as they were
+when separated for ever in their prime. Imposing although the monument
+is as a whole, these two figures in white marble, standing out against
+a dark background, engross attention. The entire work covers the wall
+behind the high altar, the sculptures being in pure white marble, the
+framework in black. Dismissing the niched Mars and Hercules on the one
+side, the allegorised Religion and Charity on the other, we study the
+central figures both offering interest of quite different kind.
+
+Why a dashing soldier and courtier of the Renaissance should
+be represented in the guise of a Roman warrior, is an anomaly,
+irreconcilable as that of pagan gods and the personification of
+Christian attributes here placed vis-à-vis. Perhaps the grief-stricken
+wife, who was, as it appears, of a highly romantic and adventuresome
+turn, wished thus to commemorate the heroic qualities of her husband;
+she might also have wished to dissociate him altogether from his own
+time, a period of which, in her eyes, he would be the victim. Be this
+as it may, the Roman undress and accoutrements do not harmonise with a
+physiognomy essentially French and French of a given epoch. Whilst the
+interest aroused by the Duchess’s effigy is purely artistic, that of her
+husband excites curiosity rather than admiration. The head is
+strangely poised, much as if the artist intended to suggest the fact
+of decapitation; obliquity of vision, a defect hereditary in the
+Montmorencys, is also indicated, adding singularity. The half-recumbent
+figure by the Duke’s side, is of rare pathos and beauty. Almost angelic
+in its resignation and religious fervour is the upturned face. The
+drapery, too, shows classic grace and simplicity, as strongly contrasted
+with the martial travesty opposite as are the two countenances in
+expression.
+
+Long will art-lovers linger before this monument raised by wifely
+devotion, a monument, with so many another, perpetuating rather the
+devotion of the survivor than claims on posterity of the dead. And let
+not hasty travellers follow Arthur Young’s example, jotting down, after
+a visit to Moulins, “No room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+SOUVIGNY AND SENS.
+
+A quarter of an hour by rail, an hour and a quarter by road, from
+Moulins lies Souvigny, the cradle of the Bourbons, and as interesting
+and delightful a little excursion as travellers can desire. On a glowing
+September morning the scenery of the Allier looked its very best. Never
+as long as I live shall I forget the beauty of that drive. Lightest,
+loveliest cumuli floated athwart a pure, not too dazzlingly blue sky,
+before us stretched avenue after avenue of poplar or plane trees,
+veritable aisles of green letting in the azure, reminding me of the
+famous Hobbema in our National Gallery. At many points the landscape
+recalled our native land; but for the white oxen of the Morvan, we
+might have fancied ourselves in Sussex or the Midlands. And cloudage,
+to borrow an expression of Coleridge, suggested England, too. Clouds and
+skies of the Midlands, none more poetic or pictorial throughout England
+seemed here--those skies above the vast sweeps of undulating chalk
+having a peculiar depth and tenderness, the clouds a marvellous
+brilliance, transparence, and variety of form! So beautiful are those
+cloud-pictures that we hardly needed beauty below. Here on the road to
+Moulins we had both, the landscape, if not romantic or striking, being
+rich in pastoral charm. Arthur Young, who looked at every bit of country
+first and foremost from the farmer’s point of view, was so much struck
+with the neighbourhood of Moulins that, but for the Revolution, he would
+very probably have become a French landowner. Just eight miles from the
+city he visited in August, 1789, an estate was offered for sale by its
+possessor, the Marquis de Goutte. “The finest climate in France, perhaps
+in Europe,” he wrote, “a beautiful and healthy country, excellent roads,
+and navigation to Paris; wine, game, fish, and everything appears on the
+table except the produce of the tropics; a good house, a fine garden,
+with ready markets for every kind of produce; and, above all the rest,
+three thousand acres of enclosed land, capable in a very little time of
+being, without expense, quadrupled in its produce--altogether formed a
+picture sufficient to tempt a man who had been twenty-five years in the
+constant practice of husbandry adapted to the soil.” The price of the
+whole was only thirteen thousand and odd pounds, and the seller took
+care to explain that “all seigneurial rights _haute justice_” (that is
+to say, the privilege of hanging poachers, and others, at the château
+gates), were included in the purchase money. But the country was already
+in a ferment, and had our countryman struck a bargain then and there,
+the last-named extras would have proved a dead letter. Seigneurial
+rights were being abolished, or rather surrendered, at the very time
+that this transaction was under consideration. As Arthur Young tells
+us, he might as well have asked for an elephant at Moulins as for a
+newspaper. No one knew, or apparently cared to know, what was taking
+place in Paris. On asking his landlady for a newspaper, she replied she
+had none, they were too dear. Whereupon the irate traveller wrote down
+in his diary: “it is a great pity that there is not a camp of _brigands_
+in your coffee room, Madame Bourgeau.”
+
+This part of France is not a region of prosperous peasant farmers, nor
+is it a chess-board of tiny crops, the four or five acre freeholds of
+small owners cut up into miniature fields. I had a long talk with a
+countryman, and he informed me that, as in Arthur Young’s time, the land
+belongs to large owners, and is still, as in his time, cultivated by
+_métayers_ on the half-profit system. At the present day, however,
+another class has sprung up, that of tenant farmers on a considerable
+scale; these, in their turn, sublet to peasants who give their labour
+and with whom they divide the profits. Now, the half-profit system does
+certainly answer elsewhere; in the Indre, for example, it has proved a
+stepping-stone to the position of small capitalist. Here I learned, with
+regret, that such is not the case. Land, even in the highly-favoured
+Allier, cannot afford a triple revenue. In the Indre, on the contrary,
+there is no intermediary between land-owners and _métayers_, the former
+even selling small holdings to their labourers as soon as they have
+saved a little capital.
+
+“No; folks are not prosperous hereabouts,” said my informant. “There are
+no manufacturers at Moulins to enrich the people, and, what with high
+rents and low prices, the half-profit system does not pay. If money is
+made, it is by the tenant-farmer, not by the _métayer_.” Curious and
+instructive is the fact that the most Catholic and aristocratic centres
+in France should often be the poorest; Moulins and the Allier afford but
+one example out of many.
+
+A beautiful drive of an hour and a quarter brought us within sight of
+Souvigny. Towering above the bright landscape rose the Abbey Church,
+its sober dun, red and brown hues, the quaint houses of similar colour
+huddled around it, contrasted with the dazzling brightness of sky and
+verdure.
+
+Still more striking the contrast between the pile so majestic and
+surroundings so homely! Here, as at La Charité, nothing is in keeping
+with the mass of architecture, which, in its apogee, stood for the town
+itself, what of town, indeed, there was being the merest accessory,
+inevitable but unimposing entourage, growing up bit by bit. The present
+population of Souvigny is something over three thousand, doubtless, as
+in the case of La Charité, less than that of its former monastery and
+dependencies. As we wind upwards, thus flanking the town and abbey,
+we realise the superb position of this cradle and mausoleum of the
+Bourbons. For Souvigny was both. Two thousand and odd years ago, here,
+in the very heart of France, Adhémar, a brave soldier, nothing more,
+became the first “Sire de Bourbon,” Charles le Simple having given
+him the fief of Bourbon as a reward for military services, its chief
+establishing himself at Souvigny, and of course founding a religious
+house. The Benedictine abbey, being enriched with the bones of two
+saints, former Abbots of Cluny, became a famous pilgrimage. Adhémar’s
+successors transferred their seat of seigneurial government to
+Bourbon l’Archimbault, but for centuries here they found their last
+resting-place, and here they are commemorated in marble.
+
+Indescribably picturesque is this whilom capital of the tiny feudal
+kingdom; topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, coated of many colours are its
+zig-zag little streets, one house tumbling on the back of its neighbour,
+another having contrived to wedge itself between two of portlier bulk,
+a third coolly taking possession of some inviting frontage, shutting out
+its fellow’s light, air, and sunshine; here, meeting the eye, breakneck
+alley, there aerial terrace, and on all sides architectural reminders of
+the Souvigny passed away, the Souvigny once so splendid and important,
+now reduced to nothingness, as is, politically speaking, the so-called
+House of France.
+
+The Abbey Church, like that of La Charité, shows a mixture of many
+styles, the general effect being magnificent in the extreme. Throughout
+eastern France you find no more imposing façade. But, as observes M.
+Emile Montégut, in the work before quoted, the church has been created
+as Nature creates a soil, each age contributing its layer; Byzantine,
+Roman, Gothic, each style is here seen, the latter in its purity.
+
+Whilst the church itself stands taut and trim, a mass of sculptured
+masonry in rich browns and reds, the interior shows melancholy
+dilapidation. But, indeed, for the stern lessons of history, how sad
+were the spectacle of these mutilated effigies in marble, exquisite
+sculptures when fresh from the artist’s hand, to-day torsos so hideously
+hacked and hewn as hardly to look human! We cannot, however, forget that
+the history of races, as of nations and individuals, is retributive.
+When the ‘Roi-Soleil,’ that incarnation of the Bourbon spirit, was
+so inflated with his own personality as to forbid the erection of
+any statue throughout France but his own, he paved the way for the
+revolutionary iconoclasts of a century later. It was simply a recurrence
+of the old fatality, the inevitable moral, since History began.
+
+For here, defaced to such a point that sculptures they can be called
+no longer, are memorialised not only Louis XIV.’s ancestors, but his
+offspring, namely, Louise Marie, one of his seven children by Madame
+de Montespan, all, as we know, with those of Madame de la Vallière,
+legitimised, ennobled and enriched. Pierre de Beaujeu, husband of the
+great Anne of France, was also buried here. Anne it was who, on the
+death of Louis XI., governed France with all her father’s astuteness,
+but without his cruelty, and pleasant and comforting it is to find that
+Duke Pierre, her husband, seconded her in every way, himself remaining
+in the background, acting to perfection the difficult rôle of Prince
+Consort. The sight of these once exquisite marbles may perhaps awaken
+in other minds the reflection that crossed my own. Heretical as I shall
+seem, I venture to express the opinion, that in such cases one of two
+courses are advisable, either the removal of the torsos, or restoration;
+why should not some genius be able in this field to do what Viollet
+le Duc has so successfully achieved in another? But for that great
+architect, the cathedral of Moulins--and how many other beautiful French
+churches?--would long ago have tumbled to pieces, been handed over as
+storage to corn merchants, or brewers! Is it so much more difficult to
+restore a marble effigy, whether of human being or animal, than a façade
+or an altar-piece? If impossible, then, I say, let broken marbles like
+those of Souvigny be hidden from view.
+
+The agreeable town of Sens on the Yonne is here described for
+completeness’ sake. Although not lying in the Bourbonnais, Sens formed
+the last stage of our little tour in this direction, a direct line of
+railway connecting the town with Moulins. What a change we found here!
+Instead of unswept, malodorous streets, and sordid riverside quarters,
+all was clean, trim, and cared for, one wholly uncommon feature lending
+especial charm.
+
+For the tutelar goddess of Sens, benignant genius presiding over the
+city, is a stream, or rather parent of many streams, that water the
+streets of their own free will, supplying thirsty beasts with copious
+draughts in torrid weather, and keeping up a perpetual air of rusticity
+and coolness.
+
+Wherever you go you are followed by the musical ripple of these
+runlets, purling brooks so crystalline that you are tempted to look for
+forget-me-nots.
+
+The voluntariness of this street watering constitutes its witchery. Post
+haste flows each tiny course; not having a moment to spare seems every
+current. Need we wonder at the fabled Arethusas and Sabrinas of more
+youthful worlds?
+
+Of itself Sens is very engaging. We can easily understand the fact of
+the late Mr. Hamerton having made his first French home here. In the
+memoir of her husband, affixed to his autobiography, Mrs. Hamerton gives
+us particulars, not only of individual, but of super-personal interest.
+I use the last expression because the idiosyncrasy described is common
+to most men and women of genius or exceptional talent. The charming
+essayist then, the art-critic, gifted with so much insight and
+feeling settled down at Sens we are told, for the purpose of painting
+‘commission pictures.’ His career was to be decided by the brush and not
+by the pen. The author of “The Intellectual Life,” with how many other
+works of distinction, had, at the outset, wholly mistaken his vocation.
+“The first thing considered by Gilbert when he settled at Sens,” writes
+Mrs. Hamerton, “was the choice of subjects for his commission pictures,
+which he intended to paint directly from nature; and he soon selected
+panoramic views from the top of a vine-clad hill, called Saint Bon,
+which commands an extensive view of the river Yonne, and of the plains
+about it.” Unfortunately, rather we should say fortunately, anyhow,
+for the reading world, the ‘commission pictures’ were declined. The
+disappointed artist, out of humour with Sens, made a series of journeys
+in search of an ideal home, the result being that most entertaining and
+successful book, “Round My House,” and the final devotion of its author
+to letters.
+
+Sens might well seem an ideal place of abode to many. Formed from the
+ancient Province of Burgundy, the Department of the Yonne has the charm
+of Burgundian scenery, with the addition of a wide, lovely river.
+All travellers on the Lyons-Marseilles Railway will recall the noble
+appearance of the town from the railway--the Cathedral, with its one
+lofty tower, rising above grey roofs, no factory chimneys marring the
+outline, and, between bright stretches of country, the Yonne, not least
+enchanting of French rivers, if not the most striking or romantic,
+perhaps the sweetest and most soothing in the world. The favourable
+impression of Sens gained by this fleeting view, is more than justified
+on nearer acquaintance. The Cathedral, externally less imposing than
+those of Bourges, Rheims, or even Rodez and Beauvais, is of a piece
+alike without and within, no tasteless excrescence disfiguring its
+outer walls, little or no modern tawdriness to be seen inside, an
+architectural gem of great purity. For the curious in such matters, the
+sacristy offers many wonders, among others a large fragment of the
+true cross, presented to Sens by Charlemagne. Less apocryphal are the
+vestments of our own Archbishop Thomas, alb, girdle, stole, and the
+rest, all most carefully preserved and exhibited in a glass case. It
+will be remembered that, when the turbulent Thomas of London, afterwards
+known as Becket, was condemned as a traitor, he fled to France. “This is
+a fearful day,” said one of his attendants on hearing the sentence. “The
+Day of Judgment will be more fearful,” replied Thomas. It was not at
+Sens, however, that the refugee took up his abode, but in the Abbey of
+St. Colombe, now in ruins hard by.
+
+On the other side of the bridge, crowning an islet, stands one of those
+curious church_lets_, or churc_lings_ I was about to say, that possess
+so powerful a fascination for the archaeological mind. Particularly
+striking was the little Romanesque interior in the September twilight,
+a picturesque group of Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul, rehearsing
+canticles with their pupils at one end, the subdued light just enabling
+us to realise the harmony of proportions. This little church of
+St. Maurice dating from the twelfth century, partly restored in the
+sixteenth, must not on any account be missed. Its pretty spire crowns
+the Isle d’Yonne, or island of the Yonne.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.
+
+Late and tired, I arrived, one September evening, at Arcis-sur-Aube,
+birthplace and home of the great Danton.
+
+I had brought with me letters of introduction to friends’ friends,
+unaware that at such a moment the sign-manual of the President of the
+Republic himself would hardly have secured me a night’s lodging. For
+at this especial moment the little town, from end to end, was in the
+possession of the military headquarters of that year’s manoeuvres.
+
+Every private dwelling showed a notice of the officers in command
+sheltered under its roof. Here and there, the presence of sentinels
+indicated the location of generals. The hotels were crowded from
+basement to attic, folks who let lodgings for hire had made bargains
+long before, whilst the very poorest made up beds, or turned out of
+their own, to accommodate the rank and file. At the extreme end of the
+town, close to the ancestral home of the Dantons, stands the straggling
+old-fashioned Hôtel de la Poste, a hostelry, I should suppose, not in
+the least changed since the days of the great conventionnel. All here
+was bustle and excitement. Mine host was spitting game in the kitchen,
+and could hardly find time to answer my application; soldiers and
+officers’ servants, scullions and men of all-work, almost knocked
+each other down in the inn-yard, the landlady, generally so affable a
+personage in provincial France, gave me the cold shoulder. I turned out
+in the forlorn hope of finding a good Samaritan. Of course, to present
+a letter of introduction under such circumstances, was quite out of the
+question, my errand would have been the last hair to break the camel’s
+back, final embarrassment of an already overdone hostess. But night was
+at hand; the last train to Troyes, the nearest town, had gone, no other
+would pass through Arcis-sur-Aube until the small hours of the morning.
+Unless I could procure a room, therefore, I should be in the position of
+a homeless vagrant. Well, not to be dismayed, I set out making inquiries
+right and left, to my astonishment being rebuffed rather surlily and
+with looks of suspicion. The fact is, during these manoeuvres, a
+lady arriving at head-quarters alone is apt to be looked upon with no
+favourable eye. Especially do people wonder what on earth can bring a
+foreigner to an out of the way country place at such a time--she must
+surely be a spy, pickpocket or something worse!
+
+After having vainly made inquiries to no purpose along the principal
+street, I turned into a grocer’s shop in a smaller thoroughfare; two
+young assistants were chatting without anything to do, and they looked
+so good-natured that I entered and begged them to help me.
+
+Very likely an English hobbledehoy similarly appealed to would have
+blushed, giggled, and got rid of the stranger as quickly as possible;
+French youths of all ranks have rather more of the man of the world in
+them. The elder of the lads became at once interested in my case, and
+manifested a keen desire to be serviceable. Hailing a little girl from
+without, he bade her conduct me to a certain Mademoiselle D---- who let
+rooms and might have one vacant. The little maid, fetching a companion
+to accompany us--here also was a French trait; whatever is done, must be
+done sociably--took me to the address given; the demoiselle in question
+was, however, not at home, but the concierge said that, another
+demoiselle living near would probably be able to accommodate me, which
+she did. Before I proceed with my narrative, however, I must mention the
+ill fortune that befell my useful little cicerone.
+
+On taking leave I had given her half a franc, a modest recompense enough
+as I thought. The following story would seem to show that the good
+people of Arcis have not yet become imbued with modern ideas about
+money, also that they have a high notion of the value of truth. To my
+dismay I learnt next morning that the poor little girl had been soundly
+slapped, her mother refusing to believe that she had come honestly by so
+much money; as my hostess observed, the good woman might at least have
+waited for corroboration of the child’s statement. A box of chocolate,
+transmitted by a third hand, I have no doubt acted as a consolation.
+
+Dear kind mademoiselle Jenny M---- How warmly she welcomed me to her
+homely hearth! My little purple rosette, insignia of an officer of
+Public Instruction of France, proved a bond of union. This excellent
+woman was the daughter of a schoolmaster who had himself worn the
+academic ribbon, a French schoolmaster’s crowning ambition. He had left
+his daughter, in comfortable circumstances, that is to say, she enjoyed
+an annuity of £40 a year, the possession of a large, roomy house, part
+of which she let, and half an acre of garden full as it could be of
+flowers, fruit and vegetables. We at once became excellent friends.
+
+“Now,” she said, “I am very sorry that my best bedroom is given up
+to soldiers, two poor young fellows I took in the other night out of
+compassion. You can, however, have the little back room looking on
+to the garden, it is rather in disorder, but you will find the bed
+comfortable. I cannot offer to do much for you in the way of waiting,
+having a lame foot, but a woman brings me milk early in the morning and
+she shall put a cupful outside your door; bread and butter you will find
+in the little kitchen next to your room.”
+
+I assured her that such an arrangement would suit me very well, as I
+had my own spirit lamp and could make tea for myself; then we went
+downstairs. The great difficulty that night was to get anything to eat.
+The soldiers had eaten every body out of house and home, she assured me
+there was not such a thing as a chop or an egg to be had in the town for
+love or money. Fortunately, I had the remains of a cold chicken in my
+lunch basket, and this did duty for supper, my hostess pressing upon me
+some excellent Bordeaux.
+
+As we chatted, she mentioned the fact that two or three friends, much
+in the same situation as herself, occupied the little houses running
+alongside her garden.
+
+“We are all old maids,” she informed me.
+
+“Old maids,” quoth I, “how is that? I thought there were no single women
+out of convents in France.”
+
+“The thing,” she said, “has come about in this way--we have all enough
+to live upon, and so many women worsen their condition by marriage,
+instead of bettering it, that we made up our minds to live comfortably
+on what we have got, and not trouble our heads about the men. We
+live very happily together, and are all socialists, radicals, _libres
+penseuses_ and the rest. We read a great deal, and, as you will see
+to-morrow, my father left me a good library.”
+
+As we sat at table in the somewhat untidy kitchen, my fellow guests, the
+conscripts, came in, they were pleasant, civil young fellows belonging
+to different classes of life. One was a middle-class civilian from an
+industrial city of the north, the other a homely peasant, son of the
+soil.
+
+These conscripts, however poorly fed in barracks, fare like aldermen
+during these manoeuvres, everybody giving them to eat and drink of their
+best. They had just dined plentifully, but for all that, managed to get
+down a bumper of wine immediately offered by Mademoiselle Jenny; a hunk
+of Dijon gingerbread they did evidently find some difficulty in getting
+through. We toasted each other in friendliest fashion, and the civilian,
+out of compliment to myself, drank to the health of the English army.
+
+Next morning I fared no less sumptuously than a soldier during the
+manoeuvres. A savoury steam had announced game for our mid-day meal.
+
+“Now,” said my hostess, as she dished up and began to carve a fat
+partridge cooked to a turn--“this bird that came so àpropos, is a
+present from a great-nephew of Danton. He is the _juge de paix_ here and
+a good neighbour of mine. We will pay him a visit this afternoon.”
+
+Of this gentleman, of Danton’s home and family, I shall say something
+later on. We made a round of visits that day, but the _juge de paix_,
+who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country
+in search of more partridges. Other friends and acquaintances we found
+at home; among these was a retired confectioner, who had once kept a
+shop in Regent Street, and had told Mademoiselle Jenny that she would be
+delighted to talk English with me.
+
+Warmly welcomed I was by the portly, prosperous looking pastry-cook,
+who was reading a newspaper and smoking a cigarette in a well-furnished,
+comfortable parlour. But alas! thirty years had elapsed since his
+departure from England, and during the interval he had never once
+interchanged a word with any of my country-people. To his intense
+mortification, he had completely lost hold of the English tongue!
+Another acquaintance, an elderly woman, who seemed to be living on small
+independent means, had a curious house pet. This, once a pretty little
+frisking lamb, had now reached the proportions of a big fat sheep. So
+docile and affectionate, however, was the animal, and so attached had
+the good soul become to it, that a pet it seemed likely to remain to the
+end of its days; the creature followed its mistress about like a dog.
+
+The little town of Arcis-sur-Aube, like many another, is now deserted by
+all who can get to livelier and more bustling centres. Tanneries, vest,
+stocking and glove weaving and stitching, are the only resources of the
+place.
+
+During my stay, I made the acquaintance of a charming family engaged in
+the latter trade. Stopping one day in front of a weaver’s open door to
+watch him at work, I was cordially invited to enter. The head of the
+house, one of those quiet, intelligent, dignified artisans so typical of
+his class in France, was weaving vest sleeves at a hand loom, just as
+I had seen, at St. Étienne, ribbon weavers pursuing their avocations at
+home. As we chatted about his handicraft and its modest emoluments,
+his little son came in from school, a bright lad who, to his father’s
+delight, had lately gained prizes. It is curious that only one part of
+a vest, stocking or glove is done by a single hand; some goods I found
+came to this house to be finished and others were sent away to be
+made ready for sale elsewhere. By-and-by, a pretty, refined girl, the
+daughter of the house, came in and asked me if I would like to see what
+she was doing.
+
+Forthwith she took me to a neat, cheerful little room upstairs
+overlooking a garden.
+
+On a table by the open window was a hand-sewing machine, and her
+occupation was the ornamental stitching of silk and cotton gloves by
+machinery. The pay seemed excessively low I thought, I believe something
+like twopence per dozen pair, but the young machinist seemed perfectly
+contented and happy.
+
+“It is pleasant,” she said, “to be able to earn something at home and to
+live with papa and mamma and my little brother.”
+
+Before leaving, with the prettiest grace in the world, she begged my
+acceptance of a dainty pair of lavender silk gloves knitted by her own
+hands.
+
+Some day I hope to revisit Arcis-sur-Aube, and meantime I hold
+occasional intercourse by post with my friends in Danton’s town.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--(_continued_).
+
+But by far the most interesting acquaintance at this most historic
+little town was the great-nephew of Danton. Middle-aged, unpretentious
+of aspect, yet with that unmistakable look partly of dignified
+self-possession, partly of authority, seldom absent from the French
+official, I looked in vain for any likeness to the portraits of his
+great kinsman. Yet perhaps in the stalwart figure, manly proportions and
+bronzed complexion, might be traced some suggestion of the athlete, the
+strong swimmer, the bold sportsman, whose mighty voice once made Europe
+tremble. The brother of this gentleman also lived at Arcis-sur-Aube, but
+was absent during my visit. The _juge de paix_ and his family were on
+friendliest terms with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a
+chat.
+
+From him and other residents I gathered some interesting particulars
+about the Danton family. The great tribune left two little sons, George
+and Antoine, who grew up and resided in their ancestral home, hiding
+themselves from the world. Their young step-mother it was whose memory,
+when on the way to the guillotine, evoked from Danton the only betrayal
+of personal emotion throughout his stormy career: “Must I leave thee for
+ever, my beloved,” then, quickly recovering himself, cried “Danton, no
+weakness!”
+
+Madame Danton married again and is lost sight of. One of Danton’s
+sisters entered a convent, as it was supposed hoping to expiate by a
+life given up to prayer the crimes, as she deemed them, of her brother.
+Meantime, appalled by the shadow of their father’s memory, George and
+Antoine decided to remain celibate, a pair marked out for solitude and
+obloquy.
+
+“Let the name of Danton perish from the recollection of man,” they said.
+
+The elder, however, afterwards acknowledged and, I believe, legitimised
+a daughter according to the merciful French law. Mademoiselle Danton
+became Madame Menuel, and, strange as it may seem, at the time of my
+visit, this direct descendant of Danton was still living. President
+Carnot had given her a small pension in the form of a _bureau de tabac_
+at Troyes, where she died in 1896, leaving a son, who some years ago was
+divorced from his wife, emigrated to Buenos Ayres, and has never been
+heard of since. It is supposed that he is dead. The two great-nephews
+have each a son and a daughter living.
+
+The _juge de paix_ and his brother are now among the most respected
+citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their
+great ancestor. Neither of the pair inhabit the house in which Danton
+was born, and to which he ever returned with joy and satisfaction.
+
+A sight of Danton’s house is sufficient to disprove the calumnies of
+that noble woman, but inveterate hater, Madame Roland.
+
+From her memoirs we might gather that Danton was a poverty-stricken,
+pettifogging lawyer of the basest class. That Danton’s family belong to
+the well-to-do upper middle ranks, we see from the object lesson before
+us. At the time of my visit, this large, roomy, well-built house, with
+coach-house, stables and half-a-dozen acres of garden, orchard and wood,
+was to let for 700 francs a year. But so low a rent now-a-days is no
+indication of its value a hundred years ago.
+
+[Illustration: DANTON’S HOME AT ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.]
+
+The owner of the house most kindly showed me over every part.
+
+It is two-storeyed, plainly but solidly constructed, and evidently
+arranged, according to French fashion, for a combined tenancy. Two or
+three families could here well be accommodated under the same roof, each
+having separate establishments. I found myself in a covered carriageway,
+cool dark corridors leading to outhouses and stables, a wide staircase
+with handsome oak balustrade to upstair kitchen and bed-chambers, on
+either side of the ground floor were spacious salon and dining room,
+fronting town and river, water-mills and quays. In the vast kitchen was
+an enormous chopping block, suggestive of large family joints.
+
+My kind cicerone allowed me to linger in Danton’s bed-chamber. I now
+looked out from the window at which the fallen leader was often seen
+by his townsfolk during the last days of his stormy career. In his
+night-cap the colossal figure might be descried gazing out into the
+night, as if peering into futurity, trying to read the future. Did he
+perhaps from time to time waver in his decision to abide his doom?
+We know that again and again his friends urged him to seek safety in
+flight.
+
+“Does a man carry his country on the sole of his shoe?” he retorted
+fiercely, but it may well be that he here envied weaker men. Danton’s
+character was thoroughly French. His ambition was as he said to retire
+to Arcis-sur-Aube and there plant cabbages. A devoted son, husband and
+father, his affections were also centred upon others not of his blood
+and name. He tenderly loved his old nurse, and left her a small pension.
+Within the last thirty years, thanks to M. Aulard and his collaborators,
+the history of the Revolution has been written anew, or rather for the
+first time. The gigantic figure of Danton stands forth to-day in its
+true light, as the saviour of France from the fate of Poland, and as a
+founder of the democratic idea. He succumbed less because he was a rival
+of Robespierre than because he was a friend of humanity.
+
+“I would rather be guillotined than guillotine,” he repeated, and it was
+mainly his effort to stay the Terror that made him its victim.
+
+The study adjoining contained that suggestive library of English,
+Spanish, Italian, and ancient classics of which his biographers have
+given us a catalogue, but which are now, alas! dispersed for ever.
+
+The house stands conspicuous, rearing a proud front to the world, if
+world could be used appropriately of so quiet, humdrum a little place.
+A few hundred yards off we reach the Church, Hôtel de Ville and open
+square. In 1886, a monument to Danton was inaugurated here with much
+ceremony. A bronze statue represents the great tribune in the fiery
+attitude of an orator, pronouncing his immortal phrase:--
+
+_“De l’audace, encore de l’audace, toujours de l’audace!”_
+
+Arcis-sur-Aube is a little town of three thousand souls, within an
+hour’s railway journey from Troyes. The river Aube (Alba), so called
+from its silveriness flows by Danton’s house. In his time and up to the
+opening of the railways the place was a port of some importance. Boats
+and barges carried goods to Troyes, Bar-sur-Aube and other towns.
+
+Of late years Arcis has been partially surrounded with pleasant shady
+walks greatly appreciated by the townsfolk. Regretfully I quitted my
+circle of acquaintances here, little dreaming under what interesting
+circumstances I should next meet Danton’s great-nephew.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+RHEIMS.
+
+The grandest of all the grand cathedrals in France has been so fully
+described elsewhere, that I will not attempt to do justice to the
+subject myself. During one of my numerous visits to Rheims, however, it
+was my good fortune to enjoy a very rare experience. On the occasion of
+President Faure’s funeral, the great _bourdon_ or bell, formerly only
+tolled for the death of monarchs, was now heard for the second time
+during the Third Republic. Standing under the shadow of that vast
+minster the sound seemed to come from east and west, from above and
+below, dwarfing the hum of the city to nothingness, as if echoing from
+the remotest corners of France. It was no heroic figure now knelled by
+the deepest-voiced bell in the country, but in the person of the Havre
+tanner raised to the dignity of a ruler, was embodied a magnificent
+idea, the sovereignty of the people and the overthrow of privilege.
+Never as long as I live shall I forget the boom of that great bell, and
+long the solemn sound lingered on my ears.
+
+A few days later the interior of the vast Cathedral echoed with sound
+almost as overwhelming in its force and solemnity. A grand mass was
+given in honour of the dead President.
+
+In front of the high altar stood a lofty catafalque, the rich purple
+drapery blazing with gold. The nave was filled with dazzling uniforms
+and embroidered vestments. In especially reserved seats sat the officers
+of the Legion of Honour, among these in civilian dress figuring the
+honoured citizen of Rheims who has ever retained English nationality,
+Mr. Jonathan Holden.
+
+What with beating drums, clashing cymbals, blaring trumpets and pealing
+organ, the tremendous vault seemed hardly capacious enough for the
+deafening combination of sound. As a relief came the funeral march of
+Chopin, the more subdued strains seeming almost inaudible after the
+tumult of the moment before. Never surely had plebeian requiem so
+imperial!
+
+The rich, artistic and archaeological treasures of Rheims are well
+known. I will now describe one or two sights which do not come in the
+way of the tourist.
+
+One of these is the so-called “Maison de Retraite” or associated
+home for people of small means. The handsome building, with its large
+grounds, accommodating three hundred tenants, is neither a hotel nor a
+boarding establishment, least of all an almshouse.
+
+Under municipal patronage and support the “Maison de Retraite” offers
+rooms, board, attendance, laundress and even a small plot of garden for
+the annual sum of £16 to £24 per inmate, the second sum procuring
+larger rooms and more liberal fare. Personal independence is absolutely
+unhampered except by the fact that the lodge gate is closed at 10 p.m.
+As most of the tenants of the home are elderly folks, such a rule is
+no hardship. One great advantage of the system is the protection thus
+afforded to single women and old people, and the immunity from
+household cares. Meals are taken in common, but otherwise intercourse is
+voluntary. The French temperament is so sociable, however, and chat
+is such a necessity of existence, that we saw many groups on garden
+benches, and also in the recreation and reading rooms. When the
+number of small _rentiers_ is considered, i.e., men and women of
+the middle-class living upon a minimum income, we can understand
+the usefulness of this home. I learned that the establishment is
+self-supporting, the initiatory expense having been borne by the town
+and philanthropists.
+
+We strolled about with one of the managing staff finding the inmates
+very sociable; one elderly gentleman invited us to sit down in his bit
+of garden, very proud, as he might well be, of all the flowers he had
+contrived to crowd into so small a space. We were also welcomed into
+some of the neat interiors, these varying in size according to the scale
+of payment. The class profiting by this associated home was evidently
+that of the small _bourgeoisie_.
+
+Children there seemed to be none, one and all of the tenants being
+elderly widows, widowers, bachelors or spinsters. There were, however,
+a few married couples, who, if they preferred it, could cook their
+own meals at home. For single, middle-class women here was a refuge
+answering to the conventual boarding house of the upper classes.
+
+Unmarried women in France are not nearly so numerous as in England,
+and I must say they may well envy their English and American sisters
+in spinsterhood. An unmarried French lady belonging to genteel society
+cannot cross the street unaccompanied till she has passed her fortieth
+year, nor till then may she open the pages of Victor Hugo or read a
+newspaper. Even in this “Maison de Retraite” special provision was made
+for the privacy of single ladies; whether they liked it or not they were
+expected to eat in a separate dining room, and meet for social purposes
+in a separate salon. As there is no limit to the emotional period and
+the age of sentiment, perhaps these safeguards of propriety are not
+wholly superfluous.
+
+Of course the economy of such an arrangement is very great. Think of
+a respectable fairly-educated young woman getting what good old John
+Bunyan calls “harbour and good company,” in other words, all the other
+necessaries of life, with society into the bargain, for £16 a year! The
+attendance is of course somewhat rough and ready. We saw a stalwart,
+rough-haired, rather masculine-looking female setting one of the
+dinner-tables with a clatter that would drive the fastidious to
+distraction. But the good soul had evidently her heart in her work, and
+I dare aver that single-handed she got through as much as three English
+housemaids with ourselves. Would such a scheme answer in England? I
+doubt it. The Anglo-Saxon character is the reverse of sociable, and
+class distinctions are so in-rooted in the English nature that it would
+be very difficult to get ten English women together who considered
+themselves belonging to precisely the same class.
+
+Furthermore, are there with us many widows or spinsters of the same
+class enjoying even such small independent means as the sums above
+mentioned? In France, teachers, tradeswomen, female clerks and others,
+by dint of rigid economy, usually insure for themselves a small income
+before reaching old age. Fortunately habits of thrift are increasing
+in England, and our women workers have a larger field and earn higher
+wages. I had also the privilege of seeing the great wool-combing factory
+of our countryman Mr. Jonathan Holden, for upwards of forty years a
+citizen of Rheims. This town has been for centuries one of the foremost
+seats of industry in France. Mr. Holden’s chimneys are kept going night
+and day, Sundays excepted, with alternating shifts of workmen. All
+the hands employed are of French nationality and--a fact speaking
+volumes--no strike has ever disturbed the amicable relations of English
+employer and French employed. The great drawback to an inspection of
+these workshops is the din of the machinery and the odour of the
+skins. But there is something that takes hold of the imagination in the
+perfection to which machinery has been carried. As we gaze upon these
+huge engines, only occasionally touched by a woman’s hand, we are
+reminded of man, the pigmy guiding an elephant. We seem conscious,
+moreover, of what almost approaches human intelligence, so much of the
+work achieved appearing voluntary rather than automatic. The skins reach
+Rheims direct from Australia and are here dressed, cleaned and prepared
+for working up into cloth. If machinery is brought almost to the
+perfection of manual dexterousness, human beings attain the precision of
+machinery.
+
+I saw a neatly dressed girl at work whose sole occupation it was to tie
+up the wool, now white as snow and soft as silk, into small parcels. The
+wool already weighed came down by a little trough, and as swiftly and
+methodically as wheels set in motion, the girl’s fingers folded the
+paper and tied the string. I should not like to guess how many of these
+parcels she turned off in half a minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+RHEIMS--(_continued_).
+
+Rheims possesses a handsome theatre, the acquaintance of which I
+was enabled to make under exceptional circumstances. At the risk of
+appearing slightly egotistical, I will here describe an incident which
+has other than personal interest. My visit to Damon’s country, the
+particulars of which were given in a former chapter, had an especial
+object, viz., the setting of a novel of my own having the great
+conventionnel for its hero. The story was dramatised by two French
+collaborators, one of whom was at that time stage manager of the Grand
+Theatre, Rheims. What, then, was my delight to see one morning placarded
+throughout the town the announcement of the Anglo-French play? A few
+days before the first representation I had witnessed a rehearsal, and as
+I was guided through the dusky labyrinths of the theatre I could realise
+the excessive, the appalling, combustibility of such buildings. It
+is difficult, moreover, for those who have never penetrated into such
+recesses--whose only acquaintance is with the representation on the
+stage--to imagine how gloomy and sepulchral “behind the scenes”
+ may appear. However, by-and-by it was all cheerful enough, and the
+rehearsal, I must say, although of a tragedy, abounded in touches of
+humour. My friend and myself were accommodated with chairs just in
+front of the stage near the prompter, a very friendly personage, who
+was evidently interested in the fact of my presence. The actors and
+actresses dropped in one by one and we exchanged a cordial handshake.
+There was nothing theatrical about the dress or manners of these ladies,
+whose ages ranged from extreme youth to middle age. They all looked
+pleasant, lady-like, ordinary women, who might have quitted their
+housekeeping or any other occupation of a domestic nature. The men, too,
+impressed me agreeably as they greeted myself and their colleagues. Very
+amusing was the commencement of proceedings.
+
+“Come, my children, put yourselves into position,” said the stage
+manager, making corrections or suggestions as he went on; now somebody
+spoke too loud, and now somebody was too inarticulate, now an arm was
+held too forward, and now a leg dragged too much. Excessively diverting,
+also, the dummy show. In one scene of the play, a village schoolmaster
+is holding a class of little boys and girls. To-day, a row of chairs
+did duty for the scholars and were duly harangued, catechised, and even
+admonished with a cane. In another scene, a peasant woman appears with
+her donkey, to whom she confides a long tirade of troubles, the donkey
+for the moment being like the showman’s hero in the famous story, “round
+the corner.” A third and still more amusing piece of dumb show occurred
+later, when an ex-abbess acting as housekeeper to the village curé, let
+fall a basket of potatoes which were supposed to roll about the stage.
+All went well and the prompter, to whom I appealed for an opinion,
+assured me that I need be under no uneasiness, for the piece would go
+off like a house on fire.
+
+In spite of that favourable prognostic an author’s first night is always
+a nervous affair, especially when that author is a foreigner, and her
+piece a translation from the original.
+
+However, everything went merry as a marriage bell, my kind friends
+filled several boxes, and perhaps one of the most interesting
+incidents of the evening was the fact that just underneath sat Danton’s
+great-nephew with his clerk, who had come from Arcis-sur-Aube expressly
+for the occasion. Between the acts I went down and chatted with these
+two gentlemen, also with a French friend who had travelled from Dijon--a
+six hours’ railway journey--in order to witness the piece. To the best
+of my knowledge now for the first time Danton figured on the French
+stage.
+
+It must be confessed that the theatre on this especial night was not a
+crowded house. In the first place, three large soirées, which had been
+postponed on account of the President’s funeral, coincided with the
+representation. In the second place, as a rule, the wealthier and more
+fashionable classes do not patronise provincial theatres, especially
+when residing within easy reach of Paris. However, the pit and gallery
+were packed, and loud was the applause with which the appearance
+of Danton in a blue tail coat, top boots and sash, and his vehement
+utterances were greeted.
+
+It had never crossed my mind that under such circumstances an author
+would be called for; when, indeed, at the close of the piece, cries of
+“Auteur! auteur!” were heard throughout the theatre, my friends begged
+me to show myself. Which, proudly enough, I did, first saluting the
+sovereign people in the gallery, then bowing less beamingly to the
+scantier audience in the boxes, finally acknowledging the acclamations
+from the pit. If “Danton à Arcis” brought its author neither fame nor
+fortune, it certainly repaid her in another and most agreeable fashion.
+Two or three days later, a second representation of the piece at
+popular prices was given, and upon that occasion the house was full to
+overflowing.
+
+The Grand Theatre, Rheims, is a very handsome building, and like most
+other provincial houses maintains a company of its own, although from
+time to time it is visited by the best Paris troupes.
+
+Yet another uncommon recollection of Rheims must here be recorded. In
+September of last year, I witnessed such a spectacle as my military
+friends assured me had never before been afforded to the marvel-loving;
+in other words, the sight of a hundred and sixty thousand men--a host
+perhaps more numerous than any ever commanded by Napoleon--performing
+evolutions within range of vision.
+
+By half-past five in the morning I was off from Paris with my host and
+hostess in their motor car for the Northern railway station. The day
+of the great review broke dull and grey, and deserted indeed looked the
+usually gay and lively Paris streets. We reached the station at five
+minutes to six, i.e., five minutes before the starting of our train, and
+at once realised the neatness with which the day’s programme had been
+arranged, both by the railway companies and the Government. The tens
+of thousands of sightseers had been despatched to Rheims by relays of
+trains during the night, and the station was now kept clear for the
+numerous specials conveying members of the Senate, the Chamber, and the
+Press. Here, therefore, was no crowding whatever, only a quiet stream
+of deputies, wearing their tricolour badges accompanied by their ladies,
+each deputy having the privilege of taking two.
+
+Precisely on the stroke of six, our long and well-filled train
+consisting of first-class carriages only steamed out of the station,
+taking the northern route and only making a short halt at Soissons. No
+sooner had we joined the Compiègne line than we realised the tremendous
+precautions necessary in the case of visitors so august; double rows of
+soldiers were placed at short intervals on either side of the railway
+and detachments of mounted troops stationed at a distance guarded the
+route. The arrangements for our own comfort were perfect. Our train set
+us down, not at Rheims, but at Bétheny itself the scene of the review, a
+temporary station having been there erected. We were, therefore within a
+hundred yards or so of our tribune, or raised stage, and of the luncheon
+tents, roads having been laid down to each by the Génie or engineering
+body. Numbered indications conspicuously placed quite prevented any
+confusion whatever, and, indeed, it was literally impossible for
+anyone to miss his way. The only eventuality that could have spoiled
+everything, wet weather, fortunately held off until the show was over.
+The review itself was a magnificent spectacle, surely not without irony
+when we consider that this great military display, one of the greatest
+on record, was got up in honour of the first Sovereign in the world who
+had dared to propose a general disarmament! Another line of thought was
+awakened by the fact of our isolation. The specially invited guests
+of the French Government upon this occasion numbered three thousand
+persons, and it seemed that for the Czar, his train, and these, the
+great show was got up. The thousands of outsiders, sightseers, and
+excursionists, brought to Rheims by cheap trains from all parts of
+France, were nowhere; in other words, invisible.
+
+Whether or no such spectators got anything like a view of the evolutions
+I do not know. I should be inclined to think that from the distance at
+which they were kept the moving masses were mere blurs and nothing
+more. From our own tribune, adjoining that of the Presidential party,
+we commanded a view of the entire forces covering the vast plain,
+surrounded by rising ground.
+
+Amazing it was to see the dark immovable lines slowly break up, and
+as if set in motion by machinery, deploy according to orders. The vast
+plain before us was a veritable sea of men, an army, one would think,
+sufficient for the military needs of all Europe.
+
+One striking feature of these superb regiments, cavalry as well as
+infantry, was the excellence of the bands. Never before had I realised
+the inspiriting thing that martial music might be. Another interesting
+point was that afforded by the cyclists, several regiments having these
+newly formed companies. Whenever a flag was borne past, whether by foot
+or mounted soldier, the cheering was tremendous, but it was reserved for
+a regiment of Lorrainers to receive a veritable ovation. Still so fondly
+yearns the heart of France after her lost and mutilated provinces! On
+the whole, and speaking as a naïve amateur, I should say that no country
+in the world could show a grander military spectacle. Enthusiasm reigned
+amongst all beholders, but there was no display of political bias or any
+discordant note. Cries of “Vive la France!” were as frequent as those of
+“Vive l’armée!”
+
+Not a policeman was to be seen anywhere, the deputies keeping order for
+themselves. And not always without an effort! People would rise from
+their seats, even stand on benches, despite the thundered out “Remain
+seated!” on all sides. On the whole, and with this exception, nothing
+could surpass the general good humour. And when the splendid cortege
+filed by at the close, delight and satisfaction beamed on every face. M.
+Loubet was so dignified, folks said, Madame Loubet was so well dressed,
+the deportment of M. Waldeck Rousseau was perfect, M. Deschanel
+handsomer than ever, and so on, every member of the Czar’s, or rather
+the President’s, entourage winning approval. General André and M.
+Delcassé were very warmly received. The slim, pale, fastidious looking
+young man in flat, white cap, green tunic, and high boots, seated beside
+the portly, genial figure wearing the broad Presidential ribbon, set me
+thinking. How at the bottom of his heart does the Autocrat of All The
+Russias view these representatives of the great French Republic! How
+does he really feel towards France, the first nation of the western
+world to set the example of officially recognised self-government, the
+initiator of a system as opposed to Russian despotism as is white
+to black? Whatever may be the secret of this strange Franco-Russian
+alliance, it is apparently in the interest of peace, and, as such,
+should be warmly welcomed by all advocates of progress.
+
+The luncheon was superabundant, consisting of wines, cold meat, and
+bread in plenty. The task of finding refreshment for three thousand
+people had been satisfactorily solved. The only thing wanting was
+water. It seems that upon such an occasion no one was expected to drink
+anything short of Bordeaux, Burgundy, or pale ale.
+
+All the special trains were crowded for the return journey, made by way
+of Meaux, but everyone made way for everyone, and we reached Paris at
+eight o’clock, almost as fresh and quite as good-humoured as we had
+quitted it at dawn. If this great review was interesting from one point
+more than another, it was from the manner in which it displayed the
+wonderful organising faculty of the French mind. The most trifling
+details no more than the largest combinations can disconcert this
+pre-eminently national aptitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+
+The first of these places mentioned is a Champenois village twelve miles
+from a railway station. From the windows of my friends’ château I look
+upon a magnificent deer park, where during the oft-time torrid heat of
+summer delicious shade is to be found.
+
+Far away vast forests bound the horizon, to the north a hot open road
+leading to Brienne-le-Château, where Napoleon studied as a military
+cadet; eastward, lies varied scenery between Soulaines and Bar-sur-Aube,
+there woodland ending and the vine country beginning.
+
+On one especial visit during September, not even these acres of
+closely-serried forest could induce more than a suggestion of shadow and
+coolness. Although screened from view the sun was there. Throughout a
+vast region--half a province of woodland--folks breathed the hot air of
+the Soudan. The tropic temperature admitted of no exercise during the
+day, but after four o’clock tea we broke up into parties--drove, rode,
+strolled, called upon homelier neighbours, visited quaint old churches
+hidden in the trees or forest nooks, the solitude only broken by
+pattering of deer and rabbits, or nut-cracking squirrel aloft. Here
+and there we would come upon huts of charcoal-burner and wood-cutter,
+gamekeepers and foresters, too, had their scattered lodges; such signs
+of human habitation being few and far between.
+
+We are here in the remnant of the great Celtic forest of Der. The
+straggling village of Soulaines is one long street, a little stream
+running behind the picturesque, timbered houses, many of these have
+outer wooden staircases leading to grange or storehouse. Church and
+presbytery, convent and Mairie were conspicuous.
+
+In the opposite direction, another church rose above the horizon, the
+centre of what in France is called not a village but a hamlet. Bare as
+a barn seen from far and near showed this little church, and we often
+walked thither for the sake of its picturesque surroundings. The portal
+of the quaint old building is a mass of ancient sculpture, close round
+it being grouped a few mud-built, timbered, one-storeyed dwellings all
+of a pattern.
+
+Even in France are to be found day labourers, only the very poorest,
+however, being without a cottage, plot of ground, a cow and of poultry
+their own. Many of their interiors are far neater and cleaner than those
+of the farm-houses, their occupants not being so tied to the soil from
+morning to night, not, in fact, incited to Herculean labours by the spur
+of larger possession. We visited one of the poorest villages hereabouts,
+of not quite a hundred souls, but of course, provided with church,
+school and Mairie. Many a group of potato diggers we saw in the
+exquisite twilight, suggestive of Millet, many a landscape recalling
+other masters. This handful of woodlanders--for the village is
+surrounded by forests--is perhaps as poor as any rural population to be
+found throughout France. Yet here surprises await us. Some of the better
+off hire a little land, keep cows, rear poultry, most likely in time to
+become owners of a plot. They are paid for harvest work in kind, several
+we talked to having earned enough corn for the winter’s consumption--as
+they put it--our winter’s bread. They are a fine, sunburnt, well-formed
+race and seem cheerful enough. In one of the poorest houses, a huge
+pipkin on the fire emitted savoury steam, and rows of small cheeses
+garnished the shelves. Good oak bedsteads, linen presses and
+old-fashioned clocks were general. Every mantel-piece had its framed
+photograph and ornamental crockery. New milk was always freely offered
+us.
+
+Within the precincts of this hamlet we find ourselves in a bluish-green
+land of mingled wood and water; above the reedy marsh, haunt of wild
+fowl, willows grew thick; here and there the water flowed freely, its
+surface broken by the plash of carp and trout. At this season all hands
+hereabouts were busy with threshing out the newly garnered corn and
+getting in potatoes. The crops are very varied, wheat, barley, lucerne,
+beetroot, buckwheat, colza, potatoes; we see a little of everything.
+Artificial manures are not much used, nor agricultural machinery to a
+great extent, except by large farmers, but the land is clean and in a
+high state of cultivation. Peasant property is the rule; labouring for
+hire, the condition of non-possession, very rare. And whether the times
+are good or evil, land dirt cheap or dear, the year’s savings go to
+the purchase of a field or two and, as a necessary consequence, to
+the consolidation of the Republic and the maintenance of Parliamentary
+institutions.
+
+I will now say something of our neighbours. One of these was the parish
+priest, who had the care of between six and seven hundred souls. The
+fact may be new to some readers that a village curé, even in these days,
+receives on an average little more than Goldsmith’s country parson,
+“counted rich on forty pounds a year.” This curé’s stipend, including
+perquisites amounted to just sixty pounds yearly, in addition to which
+he had a good house, large garden and paddock. But compare such a
+position with that of one of our own rectors and vicars!
+
+The Protestant clergy in France are better paid than those belonging
+to the orthodox faith. Being heads of families, they are supposed, and
+justly, to need more. Let it not be imagined, however, that the priest
+receives less under the Republic than under the Empire. But the cost of
+living has increased.
+
+Of course there are black sheep in the Romish fold as elsewhere; perhaps
+even the simplicity, learning and devotion to duty of the individual I
+here write of, are rare. Yet one cannot help feeling how much more
+money the Government would have at command with which to remunerate
+good workers in pacific fields if disarmament were practicable. This
+excellent priest, like other men of education and taste, would have
+relished a little travel as much as do our own vicars and curates their
+annual outing to Norway or Switzerland. What remains for recreation and
+charity after defraying household expenses and cost of a housekeeper out
+of sixty pounds a year?
+
+Next, let me say a word about the _juge de paix_ in France, as I presume
+most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than that
+of a priest. The average stipend of a justice of the peace is about a
+hundred pounds a year, with lodging, but although his duties often take
+him far afield he is not provided with a vehicle, and must either
+cycle or defray the cost of carriage hire. I know many of these rural
+magistrates, and have ever found them men of education and intelligence.
+I, now, for the first time, found one well read in English literature,
+not only able to discuss Shakespeare and Walter Scott, but the latest
+English novel appearing in translation as a feuilleton. It is well that
+these small officials should have such resources. Tied down as they are
+to remote country spots, their existence is often monotonous enough,
+especially during the winter months.
+
+It seems to be a canon of French faith that you cannot have too much
+of a good thing, anyhow in the matter of wedding festivities. Parisian
+society is beginning to adopt English saving of time and money,
+fashionable marriages there now being followed by a brief lunch and
+reception. Country-folks stick to tradition, preferring to make the
+most of an event which as a rule happens only once during a lifetime.
+Gratifying as was the experience to an English guest, especially that
+guest being a devoted admirer of France, I must honestly confess that my
+share in such a celebration constituted probably the hardest day’s work
+I ever performed. Here I will explain that the bride’s father was head
+forester of my host and hostess, the great folks of the place, and
+adored by their humbler neighbours. Château and cottage were thus
+closely, nay affectionately, interested in the important event I am
+about to describe, and this aspect of it is fully as noteworthy as the
+truly Gallic character of the long drawn out fête itself.
+
+By nine a.m. horses and carriages of the château, adorned with wedding
+favours, were flying madly about in all directions conveying the wedding
+party to and from the Mairie for the civil ceremony. An hour later we
+were ourselves off to the village church, the house party including
+three English guests. The enormously long religious ceremony over, a
+procession was formed headed by musicians, bride and bridegroom leading
+the way, fifty and odd couples following and the round of the village
+was made. At the door of the festive house we formed a circle, the
+newly-wedded pair embracing everyone and receiving congratulations;
+this is a somewhat lachrymose ceremony. The marriage was in every way
+satisfactory, but the nice-looking young bride, a general favourite, was
+quitting for ever her childhood’s home. After some little delay we
+all took our places in two banqueting rooms, the tables being arranged
+horse-shoe wise. Facing bride and bridegroom sat my host, the second
+room being presided over by the bride’s father, of whom I shall have
+something to say later. Here I give the bill of fare, merely adding that
+the festive board was neatly, even elegantly, spread, and that every
+dish was excellent:--
+
+ Hors d’oeuvre Salade de saison
+ Radis, beurre frais, Langue fumée Fruits
+ Bouchées à la Reine Brioche. Nougat
+ Daim, sauce chassuer Desserts varies
+ Galantine truffée Vins
+ Salmis de canards Pineau, Bordeaux, Champagne
+ Choux-fleurs Café, Liqueurs.
+ Dinde truffée.
+
+
+Looking down the lines of well-dressed people, all with the exception of
+ourselves belonging to the same rank as the bride, I could but be struck
+with the good looks, gentle bearing, and general appearance of everyone.
+As to the head forester, he was one of Nature’s gentlemen, and might
+easily have passed for a general or senator. At the table sat several
+young girls of the village, each having a cavalier, all these dressed
+very neatly and comporting themselves like well-bred young ladies
+without presumption or awkwardness. During the inevitable pauses between
+dish and dish, one after another of these pretty girls stood up and
+gratified the company with a song, the performance costing perhaps an
+effort, but being got through simply and naturally. In the midst of the
+banquet, which lasted over three hours, two professionals came to sing
+and recite. From the breakfast table, after toasts,--the afternoon being
+now well advanced--we again formed a procession to the Mairie, in front
+of which _al fresco_ dancing commenced. Add that this out-of-door ball
+lasted till a second dinner, the dinner being followed by a second ball
+lasting far into the small hours. Nor did the celebration end here.
+The following day was equally devoted to visits, feasts, toasts, and
+dancing. What a national heritage is this capacity for fellowship,
+gaiety, and harmless mirth!
+
+Bar-sur-Aube lies twelve miles off and a beautiful drive it is thither
+from Soulaines. We gradually leave forest, pasture and arable
+land, finding ourselves amid vineyards. At the little village of
+Ville-sur-Terre, we one day halted at a farm-house for a chat, the
+housewife most kindly presenting me with two highly decorative plates.
+
+As we approach Bar-sur-Aube we come upon a wide and beautiful prospect,
+wooded hills dominating the plain.
+
+This little town is very prettily situated, and like every other in
+France possesses some old churches. Perhaps its most famous child is
+Bombonnel, the great panther-slayer, born close by, who died at Dijon
+and whose souvenirs bequeathed to me as a legacy I have given elsewhere.
+The son of a working glazier, he made a little fortune as hawker of
+stockings in the streets of New Orleans, returned to France, cleared
+the Algerian Tell of panthers, for a time enjoyed ease with dignity in
+Burgundy; on the outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870, as leader
+of a thousand _francs-tireurs_, gave the Germans more trouble than any
+commander of an army corps, twice had a price of £1,000 set upon his
+head, was glorified by Victor Hugo, received the decoration of the
+Legion of Honour, and as a reward for his patriotic services several
+hundred acres of land in Algeria. A gigantic statue of Sant Hubert, the
+patron of hunters, now commemorates the great little man, for he was
+short of statue, in the cemetery of Dijon.
+
+Bar-sur-Aube is connected with another notoriety, the infamous Madame
+de la Motte, the arch-adventuress, who, a descendant herself of Valois
+kings, proved the undoing of Marie Antoinette. As was truly said by
+a great contemporary:--“The affair of the Diamond Necklace,” wrote
+Mirabeau, “has been the forerunner of the Revolution.”
+
+This Jeanne de Valois, rescued from the gutter by a benovolent lady of
+title and a charitable priest, presents a psychological study rare even
+in the annals of crime. Never, perhaps, were daring, unscrupulousness,
+and the faculty of combination linked with so complete a disregard to
+consequences. The moving spring of her actions, often so complicated and
+foolhardy, was love of money and display. It seemed as if in her person,
+was accumulated the lavishness of French Royal mistresses from Diane
+de Poitiers down to Madame Dubarry. There was a good deal of the Becky
+Sharp about her too, although there is nothing in her history to show
+that, like Thackeray’s heroine, “she had no objection to pay people if
+she had the money.” If, indeed, anything in the shape of ethics guided
+the most astoundingly ingenious swindler we know of, it was some such
+principle as this: she ought to have been at Versailles, there being
+received as a recognised Princess of the Royal House; since, through
+no fault whatever of her own, she was not, she had a perfect right to
+avenge herself upon royalty and society in general.
+
+How she wormed herself into the confidence of the Cardinal de Rohan, a
+man of the world and of education, would seem wholly unaccountable
+but for one fact. The Prince Primate had faith in Cagliostro and
+his nostrums, and when an individual has recourse to astrologers
+and fortune-tellers, we are quite in a position to gauge his mental
+condition. Like Mdlle. Couesdon of contemporary fame, Cagliostro held
+intercourse with the angel Gabriel, but his occult powers and privileges
+far exceeded those of the Parisian lady-seer. He was actually in the
+habit of dining with Henri IV., and two days before the Cardinal’s
+arrest made his client believe that he had just accepted such an
+invitation!
+
+It had been Rohan’s ambition to obtain the favour of the Queen and a
+foremost position at court, hence the readiness with which he fell into
+the trap. For “the Valois orphan,” now Comtesse de la Motte, not only
+possessed great personal attractions, but an extraordinary gift of
+persuasiveness. Without much apparent trouble she made the Cardinal
+believe that she was in the Queen’s favour, and indeed in her
+confidence. Having got so far the rest was easy.
+
+How the acquisition of the already celebrated Diamond Necklace was first
+thought of, how, by the aid of willing tools, she matured and carried
+out her deep-laid and diabolical scheme, reads like an adventure from
+the “Arabian Nights.” The personification of the Queen by a little
+dressmaker who happened to resemble her, the forgery of the Royal
+signature, the final attainment of the diamonds, all seemed so easy to
+this consummate trickster that it is small wonder she became intoxicated
+with success and blind to consequences. No sooner was the necklace in
+her possession than, of course, as fast as possible it was turned, not
+into money, but into money’s worth. Houses and lands, equipages and
+furniture, costly apparel, and delicacies for the table were purchased,
+not with louis d’or, but with diamonds.
+
+We read of her triumphant entry into the little town of Bar-sur-Aube,
+cradle of the Saint Rémy-Valois family, in a berline with white
+trappings and the Valois armorials, before and behind the carriage,
+which was drawn by “four English horses with short tails,” rode
+lacqueys, whilst on the footboard ready to open the door stood a negro,
+“covered, from head to foot with silver.” Still more dazzling was the
+dress of Madame la Comtesse, richest brocade trimmed with rubies and
+emeralds. As to the Count, not content with having rings on every finger
+he wore four gold watch chains! Besides holding open house when at home,
+the pair had a table always spread with dainties for those who chose to
+partake in their hosts’ absence. Among the toys paid for in diamonds was
+an automatic bird that warbled and flapped its wings. This was intended
+for the amusement of visitors.
+
+The carnival proved of short duration. It was on the 1st of February,
+1783, that the diamond necklace was handed over to Madame de la Motte,
+Rohan receiving in return the forged signature of “Marie-Antoinette de
+France.” On August of the same year, in the midst of a banquet given
+at Bar-sur-Aube, a visitor arrived with startling news. “The Prince
+Cardinal de Rohan, Grand Almoner of France, was on the Festival of
+Assumption, arrested in pontifical robes, charged with having purchased
+a diamond necklace in the name of the Queen.”
+
+The charm of these little French towns and rustic spots lies in their
+remoteness, the feeling they give us of being so entirely aloof from
+familiar surroundings. In many a small Breton or Norman town we hear
+little else but English speech, and in the one general shop of tiny
+villages see _The New York Herald_ on sale. But from the time of leaving
+Nemours to that of reaching the farthest point mentioned in these
+sketches we encounter no English or American tourists. This essentially
+foreign atmosphere is not less agreeable than conducive to instruction.
+We are thus thrown into direct contact with the country people and are
+enabled to realise French modes of life and thought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.
+
+Within the last twenty-five years so many new lines of railway have been
+opened in France that there is no longer any inducement--I am inclined
+to say excuse--for keeping to the main road. Yet, strangely
+enough, English tourists mostly ignore such opportunities. For one
+fellow-countryman we meet on the route described here, hundreds are
+encountered on the time-honoured roads running straight from Paris to
+Switzerland. Quit Dijon by any other way and the English-speaking world
+is lost sight of, perhaps more completely than anywhere else on the
+civilised globe. Again and again it has happened to myself to be
+regarded in rural France as a kind of curiosity, the first subject of
+Queen Victoria ever met with; again and again I have spent days, nay
+weeks, on French soil, the sole reminder of my native land being the
+daily paper posted in London. It is now many years since I first visited
+St. Jean de Losne, in company of a French acquaintance, a notary, both
+of us being bound to a country-house on the Saône. At that time the
+railway did not connect it with Dijon, and in brilliant September
+weather we jogged along by diligence, a pleasant five hours’ journey
+enough. My companion, a native of the Côte d’Or, seemed to know everyone
+we passed on the way, whenever we stopped to change horses getting out
+for a gossip with this friend and that he had taken the precaution to
+provide himself with a huge loaf of bread, from which he hacked off
+morsels for us both from time to time. As we had started at seven
+o’clock in the morning, and got no déjeûner till past noon, the doles
+were acceptable. The fellow-traveller of that first journey--alas! With
+how many friends of the wine country!--has long since gone to his rest.
+The second time I set forth alone, taking my seat in the slow--the very
+slow--train running alongside the Canal de Bourgogne. On the central
+platforms of the Dijon railway station, crowds of English and American
+tourists were hurrying to their trains, bound respectively for Paris and
+Geneva. No sooner was I fairly off, my fellow travellers being two or
+three country-folks, than the conventionalities of travel had vanished.
+Surroundings as well as scenery became entirely French.
+
+The Burgundian character is very affable, and although people may
+wonder what can be your errand in remote regions, they never show their
+curiosity after disagreeable fashion. They are delighted to discover
+that interest in France--artistic, economic, or industrial--has led you
+thither, and will afford any assistance or information in their power.
+They seem to regard the wayfaring Britisher as whimsical, that is all.
+
+A train that crawls has this advantage, we can see everything by the
+way, villages, crops, and methods of cultivation. The landscape soon
+changes. The familiar characteristics of the wine country disappear.
+Instead of vine-clad hills, nurseries of young plants grafted on
+American stocks, and vineyard after vineyard in rich maturity, we now
+see hop gardens, colza fields, and wide pastures. Here and there we
+obtain a glimpse of some walled-in farmhouse, recalling the granges of
+our own Isle of Wight.
+
+Alongside the railway runs the canal, that important waterway connecting
+the Seine with the Saône; but the Saône itself, Mr. Hamerton’s favourite
+river, is not seen till we reach our destination.
+
+The little town of St. Jean de Losne, although unknown to English
+readers, is one of the most historic of France. No other, indeed, boasts
+of more honourable renown. As Jeanne d’Arc had done just two centuries
+before, St. Jean de Losne saved the country in 1636. When the Imperial
+forces under Galas attempted the occupation of Burgundy, the dauntless
+townsfolk long held the enemy at bay and compelled final retreat. After
+generations profited by this heroism. Until the great year of 1789, the
+town, by royal edict, enjoyed complete immunity from taxation. On the
+outbreak of the Revolution, with true patriotic spirit, the citizens
+surrendered those privileges, of their own free will sharing the public
+burdens.
+
+The first sight that meets the eye on entering St. Jean de Losne is
+the monument erected in commemoration of the siege. “Better late than
+never,” is a proverb applicable to public as well as private affairs of
+conscience.
+
+A little farther, and we reach the church of St. Jean. It contains a
+magnificent pulpit, carved from a single block of rich red marble, the
+niches ornamented with charming statuettes of the apostles. Close by is
+the Hôtel de Ville, in which are some interesting historic relics. As I
+passed through the courtyard, I saw an odd sight. One might have fancied
+that a second Imperial army threatened a siege, and that the townsfolk
+were laying in stores. The pavement was piled with bread and meat,
+whilst butchers and bakers were busily engaged in dividing these into
+portions, authorities, municipal, military and police, looking on.
+
+I learned that these rations were for the regiments quartered in the
+town during the autumn manoeuvres. Every day such distributions take
+place; in country places the troops have recourse to the peasants, very
+often being treated as guests. A young friend, serving his three years,
+told me that nowhere had he found country folk more hospitable than in
+the Côte d’Or. No sooner did the soldiers make their appearance in a
+village, than forth came the inhabitants to welcome them, officers being
+carried off to châteaux, men by twos and threes to the home of curé or
+small owner. “Not a peasant,” he said, “but would bring up a bottle
+of good wine from his cellar, and often after dinner we would get up a
+dance out of doors. On the saddle sometimes from two in the morning till
+twelve at noon, the kind reception and the jollity of the evening made
+up for the hardship and fatigue. We have just had several days of bad
+weather, and had to sleep on straw in barns and outhouses, wherever
+indeed shelter was to be had. Not one of us ever lost heart or temper;
+we remained gay as larks all the time.”
+
+An hour’s railway journey from St. Jean de Losne takes the traveller to
+Lons-le-Saulnier, beautifully situated at the foot of the Jura range on
+the threshold of wild and romantic scenery.
+
+A decade had not robbed this little town of its old-world look familiar
+to me, but meantime a new Lons-le-Saulnier had sprung up. Since my first
+visit a handsome bathing establishment has been built, with casino,
+concert-room, and all the other essentials of an inland watering-place.
+The waters are especially recommended for skin affections, gout, and
+rheumatism. Formerly the mineral springs of Lons, as the townsfolk
+lazily call the place, were chiefly frequented by residents and near
+neighbours. Improved accommodation, increased accessibility, cheapened
+travel and additional attractions, have changed matters. The season
+opening in May, and lasting till the end of October, is now patronised
+by hundreds of visitors from all parts of eastern France. These health
+resorts are much more sociable than our own. Folks drop alike social,
+political, and religious differences for the time being, and cultivate
+the art of being agreeable as only French people can. Excursions,
+picnics, and pleasure parties are arranged; in the evening the young
+folks dance whilst their elders play a rubber of whist, chat, look on,
+or make marriages. Many a wedding is arranged during the _Saison des
+Bains_, nor can such unions be called _mariages de convenance_, as in
+holiday-time intercourse is comparatively unrestricted. Grown-up or
+growing-up sons and daughters then meet as those on English or American
+soil.
+
+Lons-le-Saulnier possesses little of interest except its Museum, rich
+in modern sculpture, and its quaint arcades, recalling the period of
+Spanish rule in Franche Comté. The excursions lying within easy reach
+are numerous and delightful. Foremost of these is a visit to the
+marvellous rock-shut valley of Baume-les-Messieurs, so called to
+distinguish it from Baume-les-Dames near Besançon. The descent is made
+on foot, and at first sight appears not only perilous but impracticable,
+the zigzag path being cut in almost perpendicular shelves of rock.
+This mountain staircase, or the “Échelle des Baumes,” is not to be
+recommended to those afflicted with giddiness. Little sunshine reaches
+the heart of the gorge, yet below the turf is brilliant, a veritable
+islet of green threaded by a tiny river. The natural walls shutting us
+in have a majestic aspect, but playful and musical is the Seille as it
+ripples at our feet. Travellers of an adventuresome turn can explore the
+stalactite caverns and other marvels around; not the least of these is
+a tiny lake, the depth of which has never been sounded. For half-a-mile
+the valley winds towards the straggling village of Baume, and there the
+marvels abruptly end.
+
+Nothing finer in the way of scenery is to be found throughout eastern
+France. In the ancient Abbey Church are two masterpieces, a retable in
+carved wood and a tomb ornamented with exquisite statuettes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+NANCY.
+
+It is a pleasant six hours’ journey from Dijon via Chalindrey to Nancy.
+We pass the little village of Gemeaux, in which amongst French friends I
+have spent so many happy days.
+
+From the railway we catch sight of the monticule crowned by an obelisk;
+surmounting the vine-clad slopes, we also obtain a glimpse of its “Ormes
+de Sully,” or group of magnificent elms, one of many in France supposed
+to have been planted by the great Sully. Since my first acquaintance
+with this neighbourhood, more than twenty years ago, the aspect of the
+country hereabouts has in no small degree changed. Hop gardens in
+many spots have replaced vineyards, owing to the devastation of the
+phylloxera. It was in the last years of the third Empire that the
+inhabitants of Roquemaure on the Rhône found their vines mysteriously
+withering.
+
+A little later the left bank was attacked, and about the same time the
+famous brandy producing region of Cognac in the Charente showed
+similar symptoms. The cause of the mischief, the terrible Phylloxera
+devastatrix, was brought to light in 1868. This tiny insect is hardly
+visible to the naked eye, yet so formed by Nature as to be a wholesale
+engine of destruction, its phenomenal productiveness being no less fatal
+than its equally phenomenal powers of locomotion. One of these tiny
+parasites alone propagates at the rate of millions of eggs in a season,
+a thousand alone sufficing to destroy two acres and a half of vineyard.
+As formidable as this terrible fertility is the speed of the insect’s
+wings or rather sails according extraordinary ease of movement. A gust
+of wind, a mere breath of air, and like a grain of dust or a tuft of
+thistledown, this germ of destruction is borne whither chance directs,
+to the certain ruin of any vineyard on which it lights. The havoc spread
+with terrible rapidity. From every vine-growing region of France arose
+cries of consternation. Within the space of a few years hundreds of
+thousands of acres were hopelessly blighted. In 1878 the invader was
+first noticed at Meursault in Burgundy; a few days later it appeared in
+the Botanical Gardens of Dijon. The cost of replanting vineyards with
+American stocks is so heavy, viz.: twenty pounds per hectare, that even
+many rich vintagers have preferred to cultivate other crops. Some owners
+have sold their lands outright.
+
+On quitting Is-sur-Tille we enter the so-called Plat de Langres, or
+richly cultivated plains stretching between that town and Toul, in the
+Department of the Meurthe and Moselle.
+
+With the almost sudden change of landscape--woods, winding rivers, and
+hayfields in which peasants are getting in their autumn crop, literally
+mauve-tinted from the profusion of autumn crocuses--we encounter
+sharp contrasts, the events of 1870-1 changing the French frontier,
+necessitating the transformation we now behold--once quiet, old-world
+towns now wearing the aspect of a vast camp, everywhere to be seen
+military defences on a wholly inconceivable scale. It is comforting to
+hear from the lips of those who should know, that at the present time
+war is impossible, the engines of warfare being so tremendous that the
+result of a conflict would be simply annihilation on both sides. After
+ten years’ absence, and in spite of radical changes, the elegant,
+exquisitely kept town of Nancy appears little altered to me. The ancient
+capital of Lorraine is now one of the largest garrisons on the eastern
+frontier, but the military aspect is not too obtrusive. Except for the
+perpetual roll of the heavy artillery waggons and perpetual sight of the
+red pantalon, we are apt to forget the present position of Nancy from a
+strategic point of view.
+
+Other changes are pleasanter to dwell on. The Facultés, or schools of
+medicine, science, and law, removed hither from Strasburg after the
+annexation, have immensely increased the intellectual status of Nancy,
+whilst from the commercial and industrial side the advance has been
+no less. Its population has doubled since the events of 1870-1, and is
+constantly increasing. Why so few English travellers visit this dainty
+and attractive little capital is not easy to explain. More interesting
+even than the artistic and historic collections of Nancy is the
+celebrated School of Forestry. Formerly a few young Englishmen
+were out-students of this school, but since the study had been made
+accessible at home the foreign element at the time of my visit,
+consisted of a few Roumanians, sent by their Government. The École
+Forestière, courteously shown to visitors, was founded sixty years ago
+and is conducted on almost a military system. Only twenty-four students
+are received annually, and these must have passed severe examinations
+either at the École Agronomique of Paris, or at the École Polytechnique.
+The staff consists of a director and six professors, all paid by the
+State. Two or three years form the curriculum and successful students
+are sure of obtaining good Government appointments. Forestry being a
+most important service, every branch of natural science connected with
+the preservation of forests, and afforesting is taught, the school
+collections forming a most interesting and wholly unique museum. Here we
+see, exquisitely arranged as books on library shelves, specimens of
+wood of all countries, whilst elsewhere sections from the tiniest to
+the gigantic stems of America. Very instructive, too, are the models of
+those regions in France already afforested, and of those undergoing
+the process; we also see the system by means of which the soil is so
+consolidated as to render plantation possible, namely, the arresting of
+mountain torrents by dams and barrages. In the Dauphiné, and French
+Alps generally, many denuded tracks are in course of transformation, the
+expense being partly borne by the State and partly by the communes. It
+is impossible to over-estimate the importance of such works, alike
+from a climatic, economic, and hygienic point of view. The extensive
+eucalyptus plantations in Algeria, teach us the value of afforesting,
+vast tracks having been thereby rendered healthful and cultivable.
+
+A strikingly beautiful city, sad of aspect withal, is this ancient
+capital of Lorraine, ever wearing half mourning, as it seems, for the
+loss of its sister Alsace.
+
+Unforgettable is the glimpse of the Place Stanislas, with its bronze
+gates, fountains, and statue, worthy of a great capital; of the
+beautiful figure of Duke Antonio of Lorraine on horseback, under
+an archway of flamboyant Gothic; of the Ducal Palace and its airy
+colonnade; lastly, of the picturesque old city gate, the Porte de la
+Crafie, one of the most striking monuments of the kind in France.
+
+All these things may be glanced at in an hour, but in order to enjoy
+Nancy thoroughly, a day or two should be devoted to it, and creature
+comforts are to be had in the hotels.
+
+In the Ducal Palace are shown the rich tapestries found in the tent of
+Charles le Téméraire after his defeat before Nancy, and other relics of
+that Haroun-al-Raschid of his epoch, who bivouacked off gold and silver
+plate, and wore on the battle-field diamonds worth half a million. The
+cenotaphs of the Dukes of Lorraine are in a little church outside
+the town--the _chapelle ronde_, as the splendid little mausoleum is
+designated, its imposing monuments of black marble and richly-decorated
+octagonal dome, making up a solemn and beautiful whole. Graceful and
+beautiful also are the monuments in the church itself, and those of
+another church, des Cordeliers, close to the Ducal Palace.
+
+Nancy is especially rich in monumental sculpture, but it is in the
+cathedral that we are enchanted by the marble statues of the four
+doctors of the church--St. Augustine, St. Grégoire, St. Léon, and St.
+Jerome. These are the work of Nicholas Drouin, a native of the town,
+and formerly ornamented a tomb in the church of the Cordeliers just
+mentioned. The physiognomy, expression, and pose of St. Augustine are
+well worthy of a sculptor’s closest study, but it is rather as a
+whole than in detail that this exquisite statue delights the ordinary
+observer.
+
+All four sculptures are noble works of art; the beautiful, dignified
+figure of St. Augustine somehow takes strongest hold of the imagination.
+We would fain return to it again and again, as indeed we would fain
+return to all else we have seen in the fascinating city of Nancy.
+
+From Nancy, by way of Epinal, we may easily reach the heart of the
+Vosges.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.
+
+At the railway station of Nancy, I was met by a French family party, my
+hosts to be in a château on the other side of the French frontier.
+
+We had jogged on pleasantly enough for about half an hour, when the
+gentlemen of the party, with (to me) perplexing smiles, briskly folded
+their newspapers and consigned them, not to their pockets or rugs, but
+to their ladies, by whom the journals were secreted in underskirts.
+
+“We are approaching the frontier,” said Madame to me.
+
+I afterwards learned that only one or two French newspapers are allowed
+to circulate in the annexed provinces, the _Temps_ and others, the
+names of which I forget; for the first and second offence of smuggling
+prohibited newspapers, the offender is subjected to a reprimand, the
+third offence is punished by a fine, the fourth involves imprisonment.
+Now, as all of us know who have lived in France, the _Figaro_ is a
+veritable necessity to the better-off classes in France, the _Times_ to
+John Bull not more so. Similarly, to the peasant and the artisan, the
+_Petit Journal_ takes the place of the half-penny newspaper in England.
+This deprivation is cruelly felt, and is part of the system introduced
+by William II.
+
+Custom-house dues are at all times vexatious, but on the French-Prussian
+frontier they are so arranged as to provoke patriotic feeling. It may
+seem a foolish fancy for French folks, German subjects of the Kaiser,
+to prefer French soap and stationery, yet what more natural than the
+purchase of such things when within easy reach? Thus, on alighting at
+the frontier, not only were trunks and baskets turned out, we were
+all eyed from head to foot suspiciously. My hosts’ newspapers were
+not unearthed, certainly; perhaps their rank and position counted for
+something. But one country girl had to pay duty on a shilling box of
+writing paper, another was mulcted to half the value of a bottle of
+scent, and so on. There was something really pathetic in the forced
+display of these trifles, the purchasers being working people and
+peasants. All French goods and productions are exorbitantly taxed. Thus
+a lady must pay three or four shillings duty on a bonnet perhaps costing
+twenty in France. On a cask of wine, the duty often exceeds the price of
+its contents, and, according to an inexorable law of human nature, the
+more inaccessible are these patriotic luxuries, so the more persistently
+will they be coveted and indulged in.
+
+Custom House officials on the Prussian side have no easy time of it,
+ladies especially giving them no little trouble. The duty on a new dress
+sent or brought from France across the frontier is ten francs; and
+we were told an amusing story of a French lady, who thought to neatly
+circumvent the douane. She was going from Nancy to Strasburg to a
+wedding, and in the ladies’ waiting-room on the French side changed her
+dress, putting on the new, a rich costume bought for the ceremony.
+The officials got wind of the matter. The dress was seized and finally
+redeemed after damages of a thousand francs!
+
+Persons in indifferent circumstances, however patriotic they may be, can
+subsist upon German beer, soap, and writing paper. The blood tax, upon
+which I shall say something further on, is a wholly different matter.
+
+A short drive brought us to a noble château, inside a beautifully wooded
+park, the iron gateway showing armorial bearings. Indoors there
+was nothing to remind me that I had exchanged Republican France for
+autocratic Prussia. Guests, servants, speech, usages, books, were
+French, or, in the case of the three latter, English. Every member of
+the family spoke English, afternoon tea was served as at home, and the
+latest Tauchnitz volumes lay on the table.
+
+Difficult indeed it seemed to realise that I had crossed the frontier,
+that though within easy reach, almost in sight of it, the miss, alas!
+Was as good as a mile.
+
+Alsace-Lorraine, I may here mention, is a verbal annexation dating
+from 1871. Whilst Alsace was German until its conquest by Louis XIV.,
+Lorraine, the country of Jeanne d’Arc, had been in part French and
+French-speaking for centuries. Alsace under French _régime_ retained
+alike Protestantism and Teutonic speech. We can easily understand that
+the changes of 1871 should come much harder to the Catholic Lorrainers
+than to their Protestant Alsatian neighbours.
+
+Bitterness of feeling does not seem to me to diminish with time. On the
+occasion of my third visit to Germanised France, I found things much
+the same, the clinging to France ineradicable as ever, nothing like the
+faintest sign of reconciliation with Imperial rule.
+
+One might suppose that, after a generation, some slight approach to
+intercourse would exist among the French and Prussian populations. By
+the upper classes the Germans, no matter what their rank or position,
+remain tabooed as were Jews in the Ghetto of former days.
+
+At luncheon next day, my host smilingly informed me that he had filled
+up the paper left by the commissary of police, concerning their newly
+arrived English visitor. We are here, it must be remembered, in a
+perpetual state of siege.
+
+“I put down Canterbury as your birthplace--” he began.
+
+“Good Heavens!” exclaimed I, “I was born near Ipswich.”
+
+“Oh!” he said, smiling, “I just put down the first name that occurred to
+me, and filled in particulars as to age, etc.,” here he bowed, “after a
+fashion which I felt would be satisfactory to yourself.”
+
+This kind of domiciliary visit may appear a joking matter, but to live
+under a state of siege is no subject for pleasantry, as I shall show
+further on. Here is another instance of the comic side of annexation, if
+the adjective could be applied to such a subject. In the salon I noticed
+a sofa cushion, covered, as I thought to my astonishment, with the
+Prussian flag. But my hostess smilingly informed me that, as the
+Tricolour was forbidden in Germanised Lorraine, by way of having the
+next best thing to it, she had used the Russian colours, symbol of the
+new ally of France.
+
+Another vexation of unfortunate _annexés_ is in the matter of
+bookbinding. French people naturally like to have their books bound in
+French style, but it is next to impossible to get this done in Alsace.
+If the books are bound in France, there is the extra cost of carriage
+and duty.
+
+A very pleasant time I had under this French roof on German soil. Our
+days were spent in walks and drives, our evenings entertained with music
+and declamation. Now we had the Kreutzer Sonata exquisitely performed by
+amateur musicians, now we listened to selections from Lamartine, Nadaud,
+Victor Hugo and others, as admirably rendered by a member of this
+accomplished family, all the members of which were now gathered
+together. I saw something alike of their poorer and richer neighbours,
+all of course being their country-people. This social circle, including
+the household staff, was rigorously French.
+
+Let me now describe a Lorraine lunch, as the French _goûter_ or
+afternoon collation is universally called, our hosts being a family of
+peasant farmers, their guests the house party from the château. We had
+only to drive a mile or two before quitting annexed France for France
+proper, the respective frontiers indicated by tall posts bearing the
+name and eagle of the German Empire and the R.F. of France.
+
+“You are now on French soil,” said my host to me with a smile of
+satisfaction, and the very horses seemed to realise the welcome fact.
+Right merrily they trotted along, joyfully sniffing the air of home.
+
+The Lorraine villages are very unlike their spick and span neighbours of
+Alsace, visited by me two years before. Why Catholic villages should be
+dirty and Protestant ones clean, I will not attempt to explain. Such,
+however, is the case. As we drove through the line of dung-heaps and
+liquid manure rising above what looked like barns, I was ill-prepared
+for the comfort and tidiness prevailing within. What a change when the
+door opened, and our neatly dressed entertainers ushered us into their
+dining-room! Here, looking on to a well-kept garden was a table spread
+with spotless linen, covers being laid as in a middle-class house.
+An armchair, invariable token of respect, was placed for the English
+visitor; then we sat down to table, two blue-bloused men, uncle and
+nephew, and three elderly women in mob caps and grey print gowns,
+dispensing hospitality to their guests, belonging to the _noblesse_
+of Lorraine. There was no show of subservience on the one part, or of
+condescension on the other. Conversation flowed easily and gaily as at
+the château itself.
+
+I here add that whilst the French _noblesse_ and _bourgeoisie_ remain
+apart as before the Revolution, with the peasant folk it is not so.
+These good people were not tenants or in any way dependents on my
+hosts. They were simply humble friends, the great tie being that of
+nationality. The order of the feast was peculiar. Being Friday no
+delicacy in the shape of a raised game pie could be offered; we
+were, therefore, first of all served with bread and butter and _vin
+ordinaire_. Then a dish of fresh honey in the comb was brought out;
+next, a huge open plum tart. When the tart had disappeared, cakes
+of various kinds and a bottle of good Bordeaux were served; finally,
+grapes, peaches, and pears with choice liqueurs. Healths were drunk,
+glasses chinked, and when at last the long lunch came to an end, we
+visited dairy, bedrooms, and garden, all patterns of neatness. This
+family of small peasant owners is typical of the very best rural
+population in France. The united capital of the group--uncle, aunts and
+nephew--would not perhaps exceed a few thousand pounds, but the land
+descending from generation to generation had increased in value owing to
+improved cultivation. Hops form the most important crop hereabouts. This
+village of French Lorraine testified to the educational liberality of
+the Republic. For the three hundred and odd souls the Government here
+provides schoolmaster, schoolmistress, and a second female teacher for
+the infant school, their salaries being double those paid under the
+Empire.
+
+Now a word concerning the blood-tax. Rich and well-to-do French
+residents in the annexed provinces can afford to send their sons across
+the frontier and pay the heavy fines imposed for default. With the
+artisan and peasant the case is otherwise. Here defection from military
+service means not only lifelong separation but worldly ruin. To the
+wealthy an occasional sight of their young soldiers in France is an easy
+matter. A poor man must stay at home. If his sons quit Alsace-Lorraine
+in order to go through their military service on French soil, they
+cannot return until they have attained their forty-fifth year, and the
+penalty of default is so high that it means, and is intended to mean,
+ruin. There is also another crying evil of the system. French conscripts
+forced into the German Army are always sent as far as possible from
+home. If they fall ill and die, kith or kin can seldom reach them.
+Again, as French is persistently spoken in the home, and German only
+learnt under protest at the primary school, the young _annexé_ enters
+upon his enforced military service with an imperfect knowledge of the
+latter language, the hardships of his position being thereby immensely
+enhanced. No one here hinted to me of any especial severity being shown
+to French conscripts on this account, but we can easily understand the
+disadvantage under which they labour. I visited a tenant farmer on the
+other side of the frontier, whose only son had lately died in hospital
+at Berlin. The poor father was telegraphed for but arrived too late, the
+blow saddening for ever an honest and laborious life. This farmer was
+well-to-do, but had other children. How then could he pay the fine
+imposed upon the defaulter? And, of course, French service involved
+lifelong separation. Cruel, indeed, is the dilemma of the unfortunate
+_annexé_. But the blood-tax is felt in other ways. During my third stay
+in Germanised Lorraine the autumn manoeuvres were taking place. This
+means that alike rich and poor are compelled to lodge and cook for
+as many soldiers as the authorities choose to impose upon them. I was
+assured by a resident that poor people often bid the worn-out men to
+their humble board, the conscripts’ fare being regulated according to
+the strictest economy. In rich houses, German officers receive similar
+hospitality, but we can easily understand under what conditions.
+
+The annexed provinces are of course being Germanised by force.
+Immigration continues at a heavy cost. Here is an instance in point.
+
+When Alsace was handed over to the German Government it boasted of
+absolute solvency. It is now burdened with debt, owing, among many other
+reasons, to the high salaries received by the more important German
+officials; the explanation of this being that the position of these
+functionaries is so unpleasant they have to be bribed into such
+expatriation. Thus their salaries are double what they were under
+French rule. Not that friction often occurs between the German
+civil authorities and French subjects; everyone bears witness to the
+politeness of the former, but it is impossible for them not to feel the
+distastefulness of their own presence. On the other hand, the perpetual
+state of siege is a grievance daily felt. Free speech, liberty of the
+press, rights of public meeting, are unknown. Not long since, a peasant
+just crossed the frontier, and as he touched French soil, shouted “Vive
+la France!” On his return he was convicted of _lèse majesté_ and sent
+to prison. Another story points to the same moral. At a meeting of a
+village council an aged peasant farmer, who cried “We are not subjects
+but servants of William II.” Was imprisoned for six weeks. The occasion
+that called forth the protest was an enforced levy for some public
+works of no advantage whatever to the inhabitants. Sad indeed is the
+retrospect, sadder still the looking forward, with which we quit French
+friends in the portions of territory now known as Alsace-Lorraine.
+And when we say “Adieu” the word has additional meaning. Epistolary
+intercourse, no more than table-talk, is sacred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED ALSACE.
+
+Who would quit Alsace without a pilgrimage to Saverne and the country
+home in which Edmond About wrote his most delightful pages and in which
+he dispensed such princely hospitality? The author of “Le Fellah “ was
+forced to forsake his beloved retreat after the events of 1870-1; the
+experiences of this awful time are given in his volume “Alsace,” and
+dedicated to his son--_pour qu’il se souvienne_--in order that he might
+remember. Here also as under that Lorraine roof I felt myself in France.
+At the time of my visit the property was for sale. French people,
+however, are loth to purchase estates in the country they may be said
+to inhabit on sufferance, while rich Germans prefer to build palatial
+villas within the triple fortifications and thirteen newly constructed
+forts which are supposed to render Strasburg impregnable.
+
+The railway takes us from Strasburg in an hour to the picturesque old
+town of Saverne, beautifully placed above the Zorn. Turning our backs
+upon the one long street winding upwards to the château, we follow a
+road leading into the farthermost recesses of the valley, from which
+rise on either side the wooded spurs of the lower Vosges. Here in
+a natural _cul-de-sac_, wedged in between pine-clad slopes, is as
+delightful a retreat as genius or a literary worker could desire. On the
+superb September day of my visit the place looked its best, and warm
+was the welcome we received from the occupiers, a cultivated and
+distinguished French Protestant family, formerly living at Srasburg, but
+since the events of 1870-1 removed to Nancy. They hired this beautiful
+place from year to year, merely spending a few weeks here during the
+Long Vacation. The intellectual atmosphere still recalled bygone days,
+when Edmond About used to gather round him literary brethren, alike
+French and foreign. Pleasant it was to find here English-speaking,
+England-loving, French people. Nothing can be simpler than the house
+itself, in spite of its somewhat pretentious tower of which About wrote
+so fondly. His study is a small, low-pitched room, not too well lighted,
+but having a lovely outlook; beyond, the long, narrow gardens, fruit,
+flower and vegetable, one leading out of another, rising pine woods and
+the lofty peaks of the Vosges. So remote is this spot that wild deer
+venture into the gardens, whilst squirrels make themselves at home
+close to the house doors. Our host gave me much information about the
+peasants. Although not nearly so prosperous as before the annexation,
+they are doing fairly well. Some, indeed, are well off, possessing
+capital to the amount of several thousand pounds, whilst a millionaire,
+that is, the possessor of a million francs or forty thousand pounds, is
+found here and there. The severance from France entailed, however, one
+enormous loss on the farmer. This was the withdrawal of tobacco culture,
+a monopoly of the French State which afforded maximum profits to the
+cultivator. With regard to the indebtedness of the peasant-owner, my
+informant said that it certainly existed, but not to any great extent,
+usury having been prohibited by the local Reichstag a few years before.
+Again I found myself among French surroundings, French traditions,
+French speech. Let me add, however, that I heard none of the passionate
+regrets, recriminations, and wishes that had constantly fallen on my
+ears ten years before. One prayer, and one only, seems in every heart,
+on every lip, “Peace, peace--only let us have peace!” It must be borne
+in mind that 20,000 French Alsatians quitted Strasburg alone, and that
+those of the better classes who were unable to emigrate sent their young
+sons across the frontier before the age of seventeen. Thus, by a gradual
+process, the French element is being eliminated from the towns, whilst
+in the country annexation came in a very different guise.
+
+This will be seen from the account of another excursion made with French
+friends living in Strasburg.
+
+It is a beautiful drive to Blaesheim, southwest of the city, in a direct
+line with the Vosges and Oberlin’s country. We pass the enormous public
+slaughterhouses and interminable lines of brand-new barracks, then under
+one of the twelve stone gates with double portals that now protect the
+city, leaving behind us the tremendous earthworks and powder magazines,
+and are soon in the open plain. This vast plain is fertile and well
+cultivated. On either side we see narrow, ribbon-like strips of maize,
+potatoes, clover, hops, beetroot, and hemp. There are no apparent
+boundaries of the various properties and no trees or houses to break
+the uniformity. The farm-houses and premises, as in the Pyrenees, are
+grouped together, forming the prettiest, neatest villages imaginable.
+Entzheim is one of these. The broad, clean street, the large
+white-washed timber houses, with projecting porches and roofs, may stand
+for a type of the Alsatian “Dorf.” The houses are white-washed outside
+once a year, the mahogany-coloured rafters, placed crosswise, forming
+effective ornamentation. No manure heaps before the door are seen
+here, as in Brittany, all is clean and sightly. We meet numbers of
+pedestrians, the women mostly wearing the Alsatian head-dress, an
+enormous bow of broad black ribbon with long ends, worn fan-like on
+the head, and lending an air of great severity. The remainder of the
+costume--short blue or red skirt (the colours distinguishing Protestant
+and Catholic), gay kerchief, and apron--have all but vanished. As
+we approach our destination the outlines of the Vosges become more
+distinct, and the plain is broken by sloping vineyards and fir woods.
+We see no labourers afield, and, with one exception, no cattle. It is
+strange how often cattle are cooped up in pastoral regions. The farming
+here is on the old plan, and milch cows are stabled from January to
+December, only being taken out to water. Agricultural machinery and new
+methods are penetrating these villages at a snail’s pace. The division
+of property is excessive. There are no lease-holds, and every farmer,
+alike on a small or large scale, is an owner.
+
+Two classes in Alsace have been partly won over to the German rule; one
+is that of the Protestant clergy, the other that of the peasants.
+
+The Third Empire persistently snubbed its Protestant subjects, then,
+as at the time of the Revocation, numbering many most distinguished
+citizens. No attempts, moreover, were made to Gallicise the
+German-speaking population of the Rhine provinces. Thus the wrench was
+much less felt here than in Catholic, French-speaking Lorraine. Higher
+stipends, good dwelling-houses and schools, have done much to soften
+annexation to the clergy. An afternoon “at home” in a country parsonage
+a few miles from Strasburg, reminded me of similar functions in an
+English rectory.
+
+At the parsonage of Blaesheim we were warmly welcomed by friends, and
+in their pretty garden found a group of ladies and gentlemen playing at
+croquet, among them two nice-looking girls wearing the Alsatian _coiffe_
+that enormous construction of black ribbon just mentioned. These young
+ladies were daughters of the village mayor, a rich peasant, and had been
+educated in Switzerland, speaking French correctly and fluently. Many
+daughters of wealthy peasants marry civilians at Strasburg, when they
+for once and for all cast off the last feature of traditional costume.
+After a little chat, and being bidden to return to tea in half an hour,
+we visited some other old acquaintances of my friends, a worthy peasant
+family residing close by. Here also a surprise was in store for me. The
+head of the house and his wife--both far advanced in the sixties and
+who might have walked out of one of Erckman-Chatrian’s novels--could not
+speak a word of French, although throughout the best part of their lives
+they had been French subjects!
+
+Admirable types they were, but by no means given to sentiment or
+romance. The good man assured me in his quaint patois that he did not
+mind whether he was French, German, or, for the matter of that, English,
+so long as he could get along comfortably and peacefully! He added,
+however, that under the former _régime_ taxes had been much lower and
+farming much more profitable. The good folk brought out bread and wine,
+and we toasted each other in right hearty fashion. Over the sideboard
+of their clean, well-furnished sitting room hung a small photograph of
+William II. On our return to our first host we found a sumptuous five
+o’clock tea prepared for the ladies, whilst more solid refreshments
+awaited the gentlemen in the garden.
+
+Even in a remote corner of Alsace, memorialized by Germany’s greatest
+poet, we find pathetic clinging to France.
+
+Everyone has read the story of Goethe and Frederika, how the great poet,
+then a student at the Strasburg University, was taken by a comrade to
+the simple parsonage of Sesenheim, how the artless daughter of the house
+with her sweet Alsatian songs, enchanted the brilliant youth, how he
+found himself, as he tells us in his autobiography, suddenly in the
+immortal family of the Vicar of Wakefield. “And here comes Moses too!”
+ cried Goethe, as Frederika’s brother appeared. That accidental visit has
+in turn immortalised Sesenheim. The place breathes of Frederika. It has
+become a shrine dedicated to pure, girlish love.
+
+A new line of railway takes us from Strasburg in about an hour over the
+flat, monotonous stretch of country, so slowly crossed by diligence in
+Goethe’s time. The appearance of the city from this side--the French
+side--is truly awful: we see fortification after fortification, with
+vast powder magazines at intervals, on the outer earthworks bristling
+rows of cannon, beyond, several of the thirteen forts constructed since
+the war. The bright greenery of the turf covering these earthworks does
+not detract from their dreadful appearance. Past the vast workshops
+and stores of the railway station--a small town in itself--past market
+gardens, hop gardens, hayfields, beech-woods, all drenched with a
+week of rain, past old-world villages, the railway runs to Sesenheim,
+alongside the high road familiar to Goethe. We alight at the neat,
+clean, trim station (in the matter of cleanliness the new _regime_ bears
+the palm over the old), and take the flooded road to the village. An
+old, bent, wrinkled peasant woman, speaking French, directs us for full
+information about Frédérique--thus is the name written in French--to the
+auberge. First, with no little interest and pride, she unhooks from
+her own wall a framed picture, containing portraits of Goethe, and
+Frederika, and drawings of church and parsonage as they were. The former
+has been restored and the latter wholly rebuilt.
+
+As we make our way to the little inn over against these, we pass a
+new handsome communal school in course of erection. On questioning two
+children in French, they shake their heads and pass on. The thought
+naturally arises--did the various French Governments, throughout the
+period of a hundred and odd years ending in 1870, do much in the way of
+assimilating the German population of Alsace?
+
+It would not seem so, seeing that up till the Franco-Prussian war the
+country folk retained their German speech, or at least patois. Under
+the present rule only German is taught in communal schools, and in
+the gymnasiums or lycées, two hours a week only being allowed for the
+teaching of French. At the Auberge du Bouf, over against the church and
+parsonage, we chat with the master in French about Goethe and Frederika;
+his womankind, however, only spoke patois. Here, nevertheless, we find
+French hearts, French sympathies, and occasionally French gaiety.
+
+Unidyllic, yet full of instruction, is the drive in the opposite
+direction to Kehl. We are here approaching friendly frontiers, yet the
+aspect is hardly less dreadful. True that cannon do not bristle on the
+outer line of the triple fortifications; otherwise the state of things
+is similar. We see lines of vast powder magazines, enormous barracks
+of recent construction, preparations for defence, on a scale altogether
+inconceivable and indescribable. Little wonder that meat is a shilling
+a pound, instead of fourpence as before the annexation, that bread has
+doubled in price, taxation also, and, to make matters worse, that trade
+has remained persistently dull!
+
+A tremendous triple-arched, stone gate, guarded by sentinels, has been
+erected on this side of the lower Rhine, over against the Duchy of
+Baden. No sooner are we through than our hearts are rejoiced with signs
+of peace and innocent enjoyment, restaurants and coffee gardens, family
+groups resting under the trees. Beyond, flowing briskly amid wooded
+banks to right and left, is the Rhine, a glorious sight, compensating
+for so many that have just given us the heartache.
+
+Of Strasburg I will say little. Full descriptions of the new city, for
+such an expression is no figure of speech, are given in the English,
+French, and German guide books. The first care of the German Government
+after coming into possession was to repair the havoc caused by the
+bombardment, the rebuilding of public buildings, monuments and streets
+that had been partially or entirely destroyed in 1871. Among these were
+the Museum and Public Library, the Protestant church, several orphanages
+and hospitals, lastly, incredible as it may seem, the beautiful
+octagonal tower of the Cathedral. The incidents of this vandalism have
+just been graphically described in the new volume of the brothers’
+Margueritte prose epic, dealing with the Franco-Prussian War, entitled
+“Les Braves Gens.”
+
+I remember writing on the occasion of my first visit to Strasburg, a few
+years after these events--“There is very little to see at Strasburg now.
+The Library with its priceless treasures of books and manuscripts, the
+Museum of painting and sculpture, rich in _chefs d’oeuvre_ of the French
+school, the handsome Protestant church, the theatre, the Palais de
+Justice, were all completely destroyed by the Prussian bombardment,
+not to speak of buildings of lesser importance, four hundred private
+dwellings, and hundreds of civilians killed and wounded by the shells.
+Nor was the cathedral spared, and would doubtless have perished
+altogether also but for the enforced surrender of the heroic city.”
+
+Since that sad time a new Strasburg has sprung up, of which the
+University is the central feature. A thousand students now frequent this
+great school of learning, the professorial staff numbering a hundred.
+One noteworthy point is the excessive cheapness of a learned or
+scientific education. Autocratic Prussia emulates democratic France.
+I was assured by an Alsatian who had graduated here that a year’s fees
+need not exceed ten pounds! Students board and lodge themselves outside
+the University, and, of course, as economically as they please. They
+consist chiefly of Germans, for sons of French parents of the middle and
+upper ranks are sent over the frontier before the age of seventeen in
+order to evade the German military service. They thus exile themselves
+for ever. This cruel severance of family ties is, as I have said, one
+of the saddest effects of annexation. Without and within, the group
+of buildings forming the University is of great splendour. Alike
+architecture and decoration are on a costly scale; the vast corridors
+with tesselated marble floors, marble columns, domes covered with
+frescoes, statuary, stained glass, and gilded panels, must impress the
+mind of the poorer students. Less agreeable is the reflection of the
+taxpayer. This new Imperial quarter represents millions of marks, whilst
+the defences of Strasburg alone represent many millions more. One of
+the five facultés is devoted to Natural Science. The Museum of Natural
+History, the mineralogical collections, and the chemical laboratories
+have each their separate building, whilst at the extreme end of the
+University gardens is the handsome new observatory, with covered way
+leading to the equally handsome residence of the astronomer in charge.
+Thus the learned star-gazer can reach his telescope under cover in
+wintry weather. In addition to the University library described above,
+the various class-rooms have each small separate libraries, sections
+of history, literature, etc., on which the students can immediately lay
+their hands. All the buildings are heated with gas or water.
+
+Just beyond these precincts we come upon a striking contrast--row after
+row of brand-new barracks, military bakeries, foundries, and stores;
+piles of cannon balls, powder magazines, war material, one would
+think, sufficient to blow up all Europe. Incongruous indeed is
+this juxtaposition of a noble seat of learning and militarism only
+commensurate with barbaric times. A good way off is the School of
+Medicine. This, indeed, owes little or nothing to the new régime, having
+been founded by the French Government long before 1870. It is a vast
+group of buildings, one of which can only be glanced at with a shudder.
+My friend pointed out to me an annexe or “vivisection department.” Here,
+as he expressed it, is maintained quite a menagerie of unhappy animals
+destined for the tortures of the vivisector’s knife. The very thought
+sickened me, and I was glad to give up sight-seeing and drop in for
+half-an-hour’s chat with a charming old lady, French to the backbone,
+living under the mighty shadow of the Cathedral. She entertained me with
+her experiences during the bombardment, when cooped up with a hundred
+persons, rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, all passing fifteen days in a
+dark, damp cellar. Many horrible stories she related, but somehow
+they seemed less horrible than the thought of tame, timid, and even
+affectionate and intelligent creatures, slowly and deliberately tortured
+to death, for the sake, forsooth, of what? Of this corporeal frame
+man himself has done his best to vitiate and dishonour, mere clayey
+envelope--so theologians tell us--of an immortal soul!
+
+Strasburg, like Metz, is one vast camp, at the time of this second
+visit the forty thousand soldiers in garrison here were away for the
+manoeuvres. In another week or two the town would swarm with them.
+
+I will now say a few words about the administration of the annexed
+provinces, a subject on which exists much misapprehension.
+
+As I have explained, no liberty, as we understand it, exists for the
+French subjects of the German Emperor, neither freedom of speech, nor of
+the press, nor of public meeting are enjoyed in Alsace and the portion
+of Lorraine no longer French. A rigorous censorship of books as well
+as newspapers is carried on. Even religious worship is under perpetual
+surveillance. One by one French pastors and priests are supplanted
+by their German brethren. A much respected pastor of Mulhouse, long
+resident in that city and ardently French, told me some years ago that
+he expected to be the last of his countrymen permitted to officiate.
+Police officers wearing plain clothes attend the churches in which
+French is still permitted on Sunday. There is nothing that can be called
+representative or real parliamentary government. The Stadtholder or
+Governor is in reality a dictator armed with autocratic powers. He
+can, at a moment’s notice, expel citizens, or stop newspapers. As to
+administration, it rests in the hands of the State Secretariat or body
+of Ministers, three in number. There is a pretence at home rule, but
+one fact suffices to explain its character and working. Of the thirty
+members forming the local Reichstag, sitting at Strasburg, fifteen are
+always named by the Stadtholder himself. This little Chamber of Deputies
+deliberates upon provincial affairs, all Bills having to pass the
+Chamber at Berlin and receive the Imperial sanction before becoming law.
+As to the party of protest in the Reichstag itself, formerly headed by
+the late Jean Dollfuss, I was assured that it had ceased to exist.
+Years before, then burdened with the weight of care and years, the great
+patriot of Mulhouse had said to me, “I no longer take my seat at Berlin.
+Of what good?” And were he living still, that great and good man,
+burning as was his patriotism, inextinguishable as was his love for
+France, would doubtless echo the words I now heard on every lip, “Peace,
+peace; only let us have peace!”
+
+Whilst at Strasburg German has crowded out French, at Mulhouse I found
+French still universally spoken. The prohibition of native speech in
+schools is not only a domestic but a commercial grievance. As extensive
+business relations exist between the two countries, especially near the
+frontier, a knowledge of both French and German is really necessary
+to all classes. Even tourists in Alsace-Lorraine nowadays fare badly
+without some smattering of the latter language. Hotel-keepers especially
+look to the winning side, and do their very utmost to Germanise their
+establishments. Shopkeepers must live, and find it not only advantageous
+but necessary to follow the same course. Sad indeed is the spectacle
+of Germanised France! Nemesis here faces us in militarism, crushing
+the people with taxation and profoundly shocking the best instincts of
+humanity.
+
+In conclusion I must do justice to the extreme courtesy of German
+railway and other officials. Many employés of railways and post
+offices--all, be it remembered, Government officials--do not speak any
+French at all, especially in out-of-the-way places. At the same time,
+all officials, down to the rural postman, will do their very best to
+help out French-speaking strangers with their own scant vocabulary of
+French words.
+
+My Alsatian hosts, one and all, I found quite ready to do justice to
+the authorities and their representatives, but, as I have insisted
+upon before, an insuperable barrier, the fathomless gulf created by
+injustice, exists between conquerors and conquered. And only last year
+dining with my hosts of Germanised Lorraine in Paris, I asked them if in
+this respect matters had changed for the better. The answer I received
+was categoric--“Nothing is changed since your visit to us. French and
+Germans remain apart as before.”
+
+“East of Paris” has led me somewhat farther than I intended, but to
+a lover of France, no less than to a French heart, France beyond the
+Vosges is France still!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: East of Paris
+ Sketches in the Gtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne
+
+Author: Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8734]
+This file was first posted on August 5, 2003
+Last Updated: May 20, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST OF PARIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Carlo Traverso, Debra Storr, Sandra Brown,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+SKETCHES IN THE GTINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE
+
+
+By Miss Betham-Edwards
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Chap.
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+I.--MELUN
+
+II.--MORET-SUR-LOING
+
+III.--BOURRON
+
+IV.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+V.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+VI.--LARCHANT
+
+VII.--RECLOSES
+
+VIII.--NEMOURS
+
+IX.--LA CHARIT-SUR-LOIRE
+
+X.--POUGUES
+
+XL.--NEVERS AND MOULINS
+
+XII.--SOUVIGNY AND SENS
+
+XIII.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE
+
+XIV.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--_continued_
+
+XV.--RHEIMS
+
+XVI.--RHEIMS--_continued_
+
+XVII.--SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE
+
+XVIII.--ST. JEAN DE LOSNE
+
+XIX.--NANCY
+
+XX.--IN GERMANISED LORRAINE
+
+XXI.--IN GERMANISED ALSACE
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+
+I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern
+France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French
+travel, no more than the _chefs-d'oeuvre_ of French literature, are
+unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing
+the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of
+Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as
+a wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their
+seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from "Notre Dame de
+Paris" or "Le Pre Goriot," to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so
+the sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of
+Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after
+the thundering Rhne. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes
+as we pic-nic on the Puy de Dme. More fondly still my memory clings
+to many a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its
+vine-clad hills or of Autun as approached from Pr Charmoy, to me, the
+so familiar home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however,
+the natural marvels of France, like those of any other country, can be
+catalogued, French scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so,
+having visited, re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon
+on the European map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a
+veritable _embarras de richesses_. And many of the spots here described
+will, I have no doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to
+myself--_Larchant_ with its noble tower rising from the plain,
+recalling the still nobler ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the
+Sahara--_Recloses_ with its pictorial interiors and grand promontory
+overlooking a panorama of forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked
+by a single sail--_Moret_ with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows
+which of the two being the more attractive--_Nemours_, favourite haunt
+of Balzac, memoralized in "Ursule Mirout"--_La Charit_, from
+whose old-world dwellings you may throw pebbles into the broad blue
+Loire--_Pougues_, the prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented
+by Mme. de Svign and valetudinarians of the Valois race generations
+before her time--_Souvigny_, cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast
+congeries of abbatial ruins--_Arcis-sur-Aube_, the sweet riverside home
+of Danton--its near neighbour, _Bar-sur-Aube_, connected with a bitterer
+enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great revolutionary himself, the
+infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace. These are a few of the
+sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I have returned again and
+again, ever finding "harbour and good company." And these journeys, I
+should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once more to that sad
+yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French, to hearts as
+devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed provinces
+twenty years ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+MELUN
+
+Scores upon scores of times had I steamed past Melun in the Dijon
+express, ever eyeing the place wistfully, ever too hurried, perhaps too
+lazy, to make a halt. Not until September last did I carry out a long
+cherished intention. It is unpardonable to pass and re-pass any French
+town without alighting for at least an hour's stroll!
+
+Melun, capital of the ancient Gatinais, now chef-lieu of the Department
+of Seine and Marne, well deserves a visit. Pretty as Melun looks from
+the railway it is prettier still on nearer approach. The Seine here
+makes a loop, twice curling round the town with loving embrace, its
+walls and old world houses to-day mirrored in the crystal-clear river.
+Like every other French town, small or great, Melun possesses its outer
+ring of shady walks, boulevards lying beyond the river-side quarters.
+The place has a busy, prosperous, almost metropolitan look, after the
+village just left. [Footnote: For symmetry's sake I begin these records
+at Melun, although I halted at the place on my way from my third sojourn
+at Bourron.] The big, bustling Hotel du Grand Monarque too, with its
+brisk, obliging landlady, invited a stay. Dr. Johnson, perhaps the
+wittiest if the completest John Bull who ever lived, was not far wrong
+when he glorified the inn. "Nothing contrived by man," he said, "has
+produced so much happiness (relaxation were surely the better word?) as
+a good tavern." Do we not all, to quote Falstaff, "take our ease at our
+inn," under its roof throwing off daily cares, assuming a holiday mood?
+
+A survey of the yard awoke another train of reflections. It really seems
+as if the invention of the motor car were bringing back ante-railway
+days for the tourist and the travelling world, recalling family coach
+and post-chaise. The place was crowded with motor cars of all shapes
+and sizes, some of these were plain, shabby gigs and carts of commercial
+travellers, others, landaus, waggonettes and victorias of rich folks
+seeing the world in their own carriage as their ancestors had done
+generations before; one turn-out suggested royalty or a Rothschild, I
+was about to say, rather I should name a Chicago store-keeper, since
+American millionaires are the Haroun-el-Raschids of the twentieth
+century. This last was a sumptuously fitted up carriage having a seat
+behind for servants, accommodating eight persons in all. There was
+also a huge box for luggage. It would be interesting to know how much
+petroleum, electricity, or alcohol such a vehicle would consume in a
+day. The manufacture of motor cars must be a very flourishing business
+in France, next, I should say, to that of bicycles. Of these also there
+was a goodly supply in the entrance hall of the inn, and the impetus
+given to travel by both motor car and bicycle was here self-evident.
+The Hotel du Grand Monarque literally swarmed with tourists, one and all
+French folks taking their ease at their inn. And our neighbours do not
+take their pleasure solemnly after the manner of the less impressionable
+English. Stay-at-home as they have hitherto been, home-loving as they
+essentially are, the atmosphere of an inn, the aroma of a holiday, fill
+the Frenchman's cup of hilarity to overflowing, rendering gayer the
+gayest.
+
+The invention and rapidly spreading use of the motor car in France shows
+the French character under its revolutionary aspect, yet no people on
+the face of the earth are in many respects so conservative. We English
+folks want a new "Where is it?" for social purposes every year, the
+majority of our friends and acquaintances changing their houses almost
+as often as milliners and tailors change the fashion in bonnets and
+coats. A single address book for France supplies a life-time. The
+explanation is obvious. For the most part we live in other folks' houses
+whilst French folks, the military and official world excepted, occupy
+their own. Revisit provincial gentry or well-to-do bourgeoisie after
+an interval of a quarter of a century, you always find them where they
+were. Interiors show no more change than the pyramids of Egypt. Not so
+much as sixpence has been laid out upon new carpets or curtains. Could
+grandsires and granddames return to life like the Sleeping Beauty, they
+would find that the world had stood still during their slumber.
+
+Melun possesses perhaps one of the few statues that may not be called
+superfluous, and I confess I had been attracted thither rather by
+memories of its greatest son than by its picturesque scenery and fine
+old churches. The first translator of Plutarch into his native tongue
+was born here, and as we should expect, has been worthily commemorated
+by his fellow citizens. A most charming statue of Amyot stands in front
+of the grey, turreted Htel de Ville. In sixteenth century doctoral
+dress, loose flowing robes and square flat cap, sits the great
+scholiast, as intently absorbed in his book as St. Jerome in the
+exquisite canvas of our own National Gallery.
+
+Behind the Htel de Ville an opening shows a small, beautifully kept
+flower garden, just now a blaze of petunias, zinnias, and a second crop
+of roses. Long I lingered before this noble monument, one only of the
+many raised to Amyot's memory, of whom Montaigne wrote:--
+
+"Ignoramuses that we are, we should all have been lost, had not this
+book (the translation of Plutarch) dragged us out of the mire; thanks to
+it, we now venture to write and to discourse."
+
+And musing on the scholar and his kindred, a favourite line of
+Browning's came into my mind--
+
+"This man decided not to live but to know."
+
+Indeed the whole of "A Grammarian's Funeral" were here appropriate. Is
+it not men after this type of whom we feel
+
+ "Our low life was the level's and the night's.
+ He's for the morning"?
+
+To my surprise I found the church of St. Aspais locked. A courteous
+hair-dresser thereupon told me that all churches in Melun were closed
+from noon till half past one, but that, as noon had only just struck,
+if I were brisk I might possibly catch the sacristan. After a pretty hot
+chase I succeeded in finding a deaf, decrepit, dingy old man who showed
+me round the church, although evidently very impatient for his mid-day
+meal. He informed me that this closing of churches at Melun had been
+necessitated of late years by a series of robberies. From twelve till
+half past one o'clock no worshippers are present as a rule, hence the
+thieves' opportunity. Unfortunately marauders do not strip beautiful
+interiors of the tinselly gew-gaws that so often deface them; in this
+respect, however, St. Aspais being comparatively an exception. Alike
+within and without the proportions are magnificent, and the old stained
+glass is not marred by modern crudities. I do not here by any means
+exhaust the sights of this ancient town, from which, by the way,
+Barbizon is now reached in twenty minutes, an electric tramway plying
+regularly between Melun and that famous art pilgrimage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+MORET-SUR-LOING.
+
+The valley of the Loing abounds in captivating spots, Moret-sur-Loing
+bearing the palm. Over the ancient town, bird-like broods a majestic
+church, as out-spread wings its wide expanse of roof, while below by
+translucent depths and foliage richly varied, stretch quarters old and
+new, the canal intersecting the river at right angles. Lovely as is the
+river on which all who choose may spend long summer days, the canal to
+my thinking is lovelier still. Straight as an arrow it saunters between
+avenues of poplar, the lights and shadows of wood and water, the
+sunburnt, stalwart barge folk, their huge gondoliers affording endless
+pictures. Hard as is undoubtedly the life of the rope tower, rude as
+may appear this amphibious existence, there are cheerful sides to the
+picture. Many of these floating habitations possess a fireside nook cosy
+as that of a Parisian concierge, I was never tired of strolling along
+the canal and watching the barge folk. One day a friend and myself found
+a large barge laden with coal at the head of the canal, the huge dark
+framework and its sombre burden lighted up with touches of grace and
+colour. At the farther end of the vessel was hung a cage of canaries, at
+the other end was a stand of pot-flowers, geraniums and petunias in full
+bloom and all the more brilliant by virtue of contrast. A neighbour
+of the bargeman, a bright, intelligent woman, brown as a gipsy but
+well-spoken and of tidy appearance, invited us to enter. Imagine the
+neatest, prettiest little room in the world, parlour, bedchamber and
+kitchen in one, every object so placed as to make the most of available
+space. On a small side-table--and of course under such circumstances
+each article must be sizable--stood a sewing machine, in the corner was
+a bedstead with exquisitely clean bedding, in another a tiny cooking
+stove. Vases of flowers, framed pictures and ornamental quicksilver
+balls had been found place for, this bargewoman's home aptly
+illustrating Shakespeare's adage--"Order gives all things view." The
+brisk, weather-beaten mistress now came up, no little gratified by our
+interest and our praises.
+
+"You ladies would perhaps like to make a little journey with me?" she
+asked, "nothing easier, we start to-morrow morning at six o'clock for
+Nevers, you could take the train back."
+
+Never perhaps in our lives had myself and my companion received an
+invitation so out of the way, so bewilderingly tempting! And we felt
+too, with a pang, that never again in all probability should we receive
+such another. But on this especial day we were not staying at Moret,
+only running over for the afternoon from our headquarters at Bourron.
+Acceptance was thus hemmed round with small impediments. And by way
+of consolation, next morning the glorious weather broke. A downpour
+recalling our own lakeland would anyhow have kept us ashore.
+
+"Another time then!" had said the kind hostess of the barge at parting.
+She seemed as sorry as ourselves that the little project she had mooted
+so cordially could not be carried out.
+
+The Loing canal joins the Seine at Saint Mammes, a few kilomtres lower
+down, continuing its course of thirty kilomtres to Bleneau in the
+Nivre. Canal life in Eastern France is a characteristic feature, the
+whole region being intersected by a network of waterways, those _chemins
+qui marchent_, or walking roads as Michelet picturesquely calls them.
+And strolling on the banks of the canal here you may be startled by
+an astonishing sight, you see folks walking, or apparently walking, on
+water. Standing bolt upright on a tiny raft, carefully maintaining their
+balance, country people are towed from one side to the other.
+
+These suburban and riverside quarters are full of charm. The soft reds
+and browns of the houses, the old-world architecture and romantic sites,
+tempt an artist at every turn. And all in love with a Venetian existence
+may here find it nearer home.
+
+A few villas let furnished during the summer months have little lawns
+winding down to the water's edge and a boat moored alongside. Thus their
+happy inmates can spend hot, lazy days on the river.
+
+Turning our backs on the canal, by way of ivy-mantled walls, ancient
+mills and tumbledown houses, we reach the Porte du Pont or Gate of the
+Bridge. With other towns of the period, Moret was fortified. The girdle
+of walls is broken and dilapidated, whilst firm as when erected in the
+fourteenth century still stand the city gates.
+
+Of the two the Porte du Pont is the least imposing and ornamental, but
+it possesses a horrifying interest. In an upper storey is preserved one
+of those man-cages said to have been invented for the gratification of
+Louis XI, that strange tyrant to whose ears were equally acceptable the
+shrieks of his tortured victims and the apt repartee of ready-witted
+subjects.
+
+"How much do you earn a day?" he once asked a little scullion, as
+incognito he entered the royal kitchen.
+
+"By God's grace as much as the King," replied the lad; "I earn my bread
+and he can do no more."
+
+So pleased was the King with this saying that it made the speaker's
+fortune.
+
+We climb two flights of dark, narrow stone stairs reaching a bare
+chamber having small apertures, enlargements of the mere slits formerly
+admitting light and air. The man-cage occupies one corner. It is made of
+stout oaken ribs strongly bound together with iron, its proportions just
+allowing the captive to lie down at full length and take a turn of two
+or three steps. De Commines tells us that the cage invented by Cardinal
+Balue, and in which he languished for eleven years, was narrower still.
+An average sized man could not stand therein upright.
+
+The bolts and bars are still in perfect order. Nothing more brings home
+to us the abomination of the whole thing than to see the official draw
+these Brobdingnagian bolts and turn these gigantic keys. The locksmith's
+art was but too well understood in those days. By whom and for whom this
+living tomb was made or brought hither local records do not say.
+
+From a stage higher up a magnificent panorama is obtained, Moret, old
+and new, set round with the green and the blue, its greenery and bright
+river, far away its noble aqueduct, further still looking eastward
+the valley of the Loing spread out as a map, the dark ramparts of
+Fontainebleau forest half framing the scene.
+
+The town itself is a trifle unsavoury and unswept. Municipal authorities
+seem particularly stingy in the matter of brooms, brushes and
+water-carts. Such little disagreeables must not prevent the traveller
+from exploring every corner. But the real, the primary attraction of
+Moret lies less in its historic monuments and antiquated streets than
+in its _chemins qui marchent_, its ever reposeful water-ways. Like most
+French towns Moret is linked with English history. Its fine old church
+was consecrated by Thomas -Becket in 1166. Three hundred years later
+the town was taken by Henry V., and re-taken by Charles VII. a decade
+after. Not long since five hundred skulls supposed to have been those
+of English prisoners were unearthed here; as they were all found massed
+together, the theory is that the entire number had surrendered and been
+summarily decapitated, methods of warfare that have apparently found
+advocates in our own day.
+
+Most visitors to Paris will have had pointed out to them the so-called
+"Maison Franois Premier" on the Cour La Reine. This richly ornate and
+graceful specimen of Renaissance architecture formerly stood at Moret,
+and bit by bit was removed to the capital in 1820. A spiral stone
+staircase and several fragments of heraldic sculpture were left behind.
+Badly placed as the house was here, it seems a thousand pities that
+Moret should have thus been robbed of an architectural gem Paris could
+well have spared.
+
+My first stay at Moret three years ago lasted several weeks. I had
+joined friends occupying a pretty little furnished house belonging
+to the officiating Mayor. We lived after simplest fashion but to our
+hearts' content. One of those indescribably obliging women of all work,
+came every day to cook, clean and wait on us. Most of our meals were
+taken among our flower beds and raspberry bushes. The only drawback to
+enjoyment may at first sight appear unworthy of mention, but it was not
+so. We had no latchkey. Now as every-one of all work knows, they are
+constantly popping in and out of doors, one moment they are off to
+market, the next to warm up their husbands' soup, and so on and so on.
+As for ourselves, were we not at Moret on purpose to be perpetually
+running about also? Thus it happened that somebody or other was always
+being locked out or locked in; either Monsieur finding the household
+abroad had pocketed the key and instead of returning in ten minutes'
+time had lighted upon a subject he must absolutely sketch then and
+there; or Madame could not get through her shopping as expeditiously as
+she had hoped; or their guest returned from her walk long before she
+was due; what with one miscalculation and another, now one of us had to
+knock at a neighbour's door, now another effected an entrance by means
+of a ladder, and now the key would be wholly missing and for the time
+being we were roofless, as if burnt out of house and home. Sometimes we
+were locked in, sometimes we were locked out, a current "Open Sesame" we
+never had.
+
+But no "regrettable incidents" marred a delightful holiday. Imbroglios
+such as these only leave memories to smile at, and add zest to
+recollection.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+BOURRON.
+
+Two years ago some Anglo-French friends joyfully announced their
+acquisition of a delightful little property adjoining Fontainebleau
+forest. "Come and see for yourself," they wrote, "we are sure that
+you will be charmed with our purchase!" A little later I journeyed to
+Bourron, half an hour from Moret on the Bourbonnais line, on arriving
+hardly less disconcerted than Mrs. Primrose by the gross of green
+spectacles. No trim, green verandahed villa, no inviting vine-trellised
+walk, no luxuriant vegetable garden or brilliant flower beds greeted my
+eyes; instead, dilapidated walls, abutting on these a peasant's cottage,
+and in front an acre or two of bare dusty field! My friends had indeed
+become the owners of a dismantled bakery and its appurtenances, to the
+uninitiated as unpromising a domain as could well be imagined. But
+I discovered that the purchasers were wiser in their generation than
+myself. Noticing my crestfallen look they had said:--
+
+"Only wait till next year, and you will see what a bargain we have made.
+You will find us admirably housed and feasting on peaches and grapes."
+
+True enough, twelve months later, I found a wonderful transformation.
+That a substantial dwelling now occupied the site of the dismantled
+bakery was no matter for surprise, the change out of doors seemed
+magical. Nothing could have looked more unpromising than that stretch
+of field, a mere bit of waste, your feet sinking into the sand as if you
+were crossing the desert. Now, the longed-for _tonnelle_ or vine-covered
+way offered shade, petunias made a splendid show, choice roses scented
+the air, whilst the fruit and vegetables would have done credit to a
+market-gardener. Peaches and grapes ripened on the wall, big turnips and
+tomatoes brilliant as vermilion took care of themselves. It was not only
+a case of the wilderness made to blossom as the rose, but of the horn
+of plenty filled to overflowing, prize flowers, fruit and vegetables
+everywhere. For the soil hereabouts, if indeed soil it can be called,
+and the climate of Bourron, possess very rare and specific qualities. On
+this light, dry sand, or dust covering a substratum of rock, vegetation
+springs up all but unbidden, and when once above ground literally takes
+care of itself. As to climate, its excellence may be summed up in
+the epithet, anti-asthmatic. Although we are on the very hem of forty
+thousand acres of forest, the atmosphere is one of extraordinary
+dryness. Rain may fall in torrents throughout an entire day. The sandy
+soil is so thorough an absorbent that next morning the air will be as
+dry as usual.
+
+This house reminded me of a tiny side door opening into some vast
+cathedral. We cross the threshold and find ourselves at once in the
+forest, in close proximity moreover to its least-known but not least
+majestic sites. We may turn either to right or left, gradually climbing
+a densely wooded headland. The first ascent lands us in an hour on the
+Redoute de Bourron, the second, occupying only half the time, on a
+spur of the forest offering a less famous but hardly less magnificent
+perspective, nothing to mar the picture as a whole, sunny plain, winding
+river and scattered townlings looking much as they must have done to
+Balzac when passing through three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+This eastern verge of the Fontainebleau forest is of especial beauty;
+the frowning headlands seem set there as sentinels jealously guarding
+its integrity, on the watch against human encroachments, defying time
+and change and cataclysmal upheaval. Boldly stands out each wooded crag,
+the one confronting the rising, the other the sinking sun, behind both
+massed the world of forest, spread before them as a carpet, peaceful
+rural scenes.
+
+I must now describe a spot, the name of which will probably be new to
+all excepting close students of Balzac. The great novelist loved the
+valley of the Loing almost as fondly as his native Touraine; and if
+these pastoral scenes did not inspire a _chef d'oeuvre_, they have
+thereby immensely gained in interest. "Ursule Mirout," of which I shall
+have more to say further on, is not to be compared to such masterpieces
+as "Eugnie Grandet." But a leading incident of "Ursule Mirout" occurs
+at Bourron--a sufficient reason for recalling the story here.
+
+The beauty of our village, like the beauty of French women, to quote
+Michelet, "is made up of little nothings." There are a hundred and
+one pretty things to see but very few to describe. Who could wish it
+otherwise? Little nothings of an engaging kind better agree with us
+as daily fare than the seven wonders of the world. With forty thousand
+acres of forest at our doors we do not want M. Mattel's newly discovered
+underground river within reach as well.
+
+From our garden we yet look upon scenes not of every day. Those sweeps
+of bluish-green foliage strikingly contrasted with the brilliant vine
+remind us that we are in France, and in a region with most others having
+its specialities. Asparagus, not literally but figuratively, nourishes
+the entire population of Bourron. Everyone here is a market gardener on
+his own account, and the cultivation of asparagus for the Paris markets
+is a leading feature of local commerce.
+
+There is no more graceful foliage than that of this plant, and
+gratefully the eye rests upon these waves of delicate green under a
+blazing, grape-ripening sky. Making gold-green lines between are vines,
+a succession of asparagus beds and vineyards separating our village from
+its better known and more populous neighbour, Marlotte. In the opposite
+direction we see brown-roofed, white-walled houses surmounted by a
+pretty little spire. This is Bourron. To reach it we pass a double row
+of homesteads, rustic interiors of small farmer or market gardener,
+the one, as our French neighbours say, more picturesque than the other.
+Each, no matter how ill kept, is set off by an ornamental border,
+zinnias, begonias, roses and petunias as obviously showing signs of care
+and science. Oddly enough the finest display of flowers often adorns
+the least tidy premises. And oddly enough, rather perhaps as we should
+expect it, in not one, but in every respect, this French village is the
+exact opposite of its English counterpart. In England every tenant of
+a cottage pays rent, there, not an inhabitant, however poor, but sits
+under his own vine and his own fig-tree. In England the farm-house faces
+the road and the premises lie behind. Here manure-heap, granary and pig
+styes open on the highway, the dwellings being at the back. In England
+a man's home, called his castle, is no more defended than the Bedouin's
+tent. Here at nightfall the small peasant proprietor is as securely
+entrenched within walls as a feudal baron in his moated chteau. In
+England ninety-nine householders out of a hundred are perpetually
+changing their domicile. Here folks live and die under the paternal
+roof that has sheltered generations. Nor does diversity end with
+circumstances and surroundings. As will be seen in another chapter,
+habits of life, modes of thought and standards of duty show contrasts
+equally marked.
+
+Bourron possesses twelve hundred and odd souls, most of whom are
+peasants who make a living out of their small patrimony. Destined
+perhaps one day to rival its neighbour Marlotte in popularity--even
+to become a second Barbizon--it is as yet the sleepiest, most
+rustic retreat imaginable. The climate would appear to be not only
+anti-asthmatic but anti-everything in the shape of malady. Anyhow,
+if folks fall ill they have to send elsewhere for a doctor. Minor
+complaints--cuts, bruises and snake bites--are attended to by a
+Fontainebleau chemist. Every day we hear the horn of his messenger who
+cycles through the village calling for prescriptions and leaving drugs
+and draughts.
+
+A post office, of course, Bourron possesses, but let no one imagine
+that a post office in out of the way country places implies a supply of
+postage stamps. English people are the greatest scribblers by post in
+the world, whilst our wiser French neighbours appear to be the laziest.
+An amusing dilemma had occurred here just before my arrival. One day my
+friends applied to the post office for stamps, but none were to be had
+for love or money. Off somebody cycled to Marlotte, which possesses not
+only a post and telegraph, but a money order office as well--same
+reply, next the adjoining village of Grez was visited and with no better
+result--"Supplies have not yet reached us from headquarters," said the
+third postmistress.
+
+Perhaps instead of smiling contemptuously we should take a moral to
+heart. The amount of time, money, eyesight and handcraft expended among
+ourselves on letter writing so-called is simply appalling. Was it
+not Napoleon who said that all letters if left unanswered for a month
+answered themselves? Too many Englishwomen spend the greater portion
+of the day in what is no longer a delicate art, but mere time-killing,
+after the manner of patience, games of cards and similar pastimes.
+
+Bourron is a most orderly village; within its precincts liberty is not
+allowed to degenerate into licence. As in summer-time folks are fond of
+spending their evenings abroad, a municipal law has enforced quiet after
+ten o'clock. Thus precisely on the stroke of ten, alike caf, garden,
+private summer-house or doorstep are deserted, everyone betakes himself
+indoors, leaving his neighbours to enjoy unbroken repose. A most
+salutary by-law! Would it were put in force throughout the length and
+breadth of France! At Chatouroux I have been kept awake all night by
+the gossip of a _sergeant de ville_ and a lounger close to my window. At
+Tours, La Chtre and Bourges my fellow-traveller and myself could get
+no sleep on account of street revellers, whilst at how many other places
+have not holiday trips been spoiled by unquiet nights? All honour then
+to the aediles of dear little Bourron!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued_.
+
+Forty thousand acres of woodland at one's doors would seem a fact
+sufficiently suggestive; to particularize the attractions of Bourron
+after this statement were surely supererogation. Yet, for my own
+pleasure as much as for the use of my readers, I must jot down one or
+two especially persistent memories, impressions of solemnity, beauty and
+repose never to be effaced.
+
+Of course it is only the cyclist who can realise such an immensity as
+the Fontainebleau forest. From end to end these vast sweeps are now
+intersected by splendid roads and by-roads. Old-fashioned folks, for
+whom the horseless vehicle came too late, can but envy wheelmen and
+wheelwomen as they skim through vista after vista, outstripping one's
+horse and carriage as a greyhound outstrips a decrepit poodle. On the
+other hand only inveterate loiterers, the Lazy Lawrences of travel,
+can appreciate the subtler beauties of this woodland world. There
+are certain sights and sounds not to be caught by hurried observers,
+evanescent aspects of cloud-land and tree-land, rock and undergrowth,
+passing notes of bird and insect, varied melodies, if we may so express
+it, of summer breeze and autumn wind--in fine, a dozen experiences
+enjoyed one day, not repeated on the next. The music of the forest is
+a quiet music and has to be listened for, hardly on the cyclist's ear
+falls the song or rather accompaniment of the grasshopper, "the Muse of
+the wayside," a French poet has so exquisitely apostrophized.
+
+One's forest companion should be of a taciturn and contemplative turn.
+Only thus can we drink in the sense of such solitude and immensity;
+realizing to the full what indeed these words may mean, he may wander
+for hours without encountering a soul, very few birds are heard by the
+way, but the hum of the insect world, that dreamy go-between, hardly
+silence, hardly to be called noise, keeps us perpetual company, and our
+eyes must ever be open for beautiful little living things. Now a green
+and gold lizard flashes across a bit of grey rock, now a dragon-fly
+disports its sapphire wings amid the yellowing ferns or purple ling,
+butterflies, white, blue, and black and orange, flit hither and
+thither, whilst little beetles, blue as enamel beads, enliven the mossy
+undergrowth.
+
+One pre-eminent charm indeed of the Fontainebleau forest is this wealth
+of undergrowth, bushes, brambles and ferns making a second lesser
+thicket on all sides. In sociable moods delightful it is to go
+a-blackberrying here. I am almost tempted to say that if you want
+to realise the lusciousness of a hedgerow dessert you must cater for
+yourself in these forty thousand acres of blackberry orchard.
+
+But the foremost, the crowning excellence of Fontainebleau forest
+consists in its variety. France itself, the "splendid hexagon," with its
+mountains, rivers and plains, is hardly more varied than this vast area
+of rock and woodland. We can choose between sites, savage or idyllic,
+pastoral or grandiose, here finding a sunny glade, the very spot for a
+picnic, there break-neck declivities and gloomy chasms. The magnificent
+ruggedness of Alpine scenery is before our eyes, without the awfulness
+of snow-clad peaks or the blinding dazzle of glacier. In more than one
+place we could almost fancy that some mountain has been upheaved and
+split asunder, the clefts formed by these gigantic fragments being now
+filled with veteran trees.
+
+The formation of the forest has puzzled geologists, to this day the
+origin of its rocky substratum remaining undetermined.
+
+Within half an hour's stroll of Bourron lies the so-called "Mare aux
+Fes" or Fairies' Mere, as sweet a spot to boil one's kettle in as
+holiday makers can desire, at the same time affording the best possible
+illustration of what I have just insisted upon. For this favourite
+resort is in a certain sense microcosmic, giving in miniature those
+characteristics for which the forest is remarkable. Smooth and sunny as
+a garden plot is the open glade wherein we now halt for tea, and while
+the kettle boils we have time for a most suggestive bird's eye view. It
+is a little world that we survey from the borders of this rock-hemmed,
+forest-girt lake, one perspective after another with varying gradations
+of colour making us realize the many-featured, chequered area spread
+before us. From this coign of vantage are discerned alike the sterner
+and the more smiling beauties of the forest, rocky defiles, gloomy
+passes, sunlit lawns and mossy dells, scenery varied in itself and
+yet varying again with the passing hour and changing month. And such
+suggestion of almost infinite variety is not gained only from the
+Fairies' Mere. From a dozen points, not the same view but the same kind
+of view may be obtained, each differing from the other, except in charm
+and immensity. Within a walk of home also stands one of the numerous
+monuments scattered throughout the forest. The Croix de Saint Hrem, now
+a useful landmark for cyclists, has a curious history. It was erected in
+1666 by a certain Marquis de Saint-Hrem, celebrated for his ugliness,
+and centuries later was the scene of the most extraordinary rendezvous
+on record. Here, in 1804, every detail having been theatrically arranged
+beforehand, took place the so-called chance meeting of Napoleon and Pope
+Pius VII. The Emperor had arranged a grand hunt for that day, and in
+hunting dress, his dogs at his heels, awaited the pontiff by the cross
+of Saint Hrem. As the pair lovingly embraced each other the Imperial
+horses ran away; this apparent escapade formed part of the programme,
+and Napoleon stepped into the Pope's carriage, seating himself on his
+visitor's, rather his prisoner's, right. A few years later another
+rencontre not without historic irony took place here. In 1816, Louis
+XVIII. received on this spot the future mother, so it was hoped, of
+French Kings, the adventurous Caroline of Naples, afterwards Duchesse de
+Berri.
+
+The crosses monuments of the forest are usefully catalogued in local
+guide-books, and many have historic associations. The most interesting
+of these--readers will excuse the Irish bull--is a monument that may be
+said never to have existed!
+
+The great Polish patriot Kosciusko spent the last fifteen years of his
+life in a hamlet near Nemours, and on his death the inhabitants of that
+and neighbouring villages projected a double memorial, in other words,
+a tiny chapel, the ruins of which are still seen near Episy, and a mound
+to be added to every year and to be called "La Montagne de Kosciusko,"
+or Kosciusko's mountain. Particulars of this generous and romantic
+scheme are preserved in the archives of Montigny. The inauguration
+of the mound took place on the ninth of October 1836. To the sound
+of martial music, drums and cannon, the first layers of earth were
+deposited, men, women and children taking part in the proceedings.
+A year later no less than ten thousand French friends of Poland with
+mattock and spade added several feet to Kosciusko's mountain. But the
+celebration got noised abroad. Afraid of anti-Russian manifestations the
+government of Louis Philippe prohibited any further Polish ftes. Thus
+it came about that, as I have said, the most interesting monument in the
+forest remains an idea. And all things considered, neither French nor
+English admirers of the exiled hero could to-day very well carve on the
+adjoining rock,
+
+ "And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell."
+
+Some time or other the Russian Imperial pair may visit Fontainebleau,
+whilst an English tourist with _The Daily Mail_ in his pocket would
+naturally and sheepishly look the other way.
+
+Another half hour's stroll and we find ourselves in an atmosphere of
+art, fashion and sociability. Only a mile either of woodland, field path
+or high road separates Bourron from its more populous and highly popular
+neighbour, Marlotte. Here every house has an artist's north window, the
+road is alive with motor cars, you can even buy a newspaper! Marlotte
+possesses a big, I should say comfortable, hotel, is very cosmopolitan
+and very pretty. Anglo-French households here, as at Bourron, favour
+Anglo-French relations. In Marlotte drawing-rooms we are in France,
+but always with a pleasant reminder of England and of true English
+hospitality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued._
+
+I will now say something about my numerous acquaintances at Bourron.
+After three summer holidays spent in this friendly little spot I can
+boast of a pretty large visiting list, the kind of list requiring no
+cards or ceremonious procedure. My hostess, a Frenchwoman, and myself
+used to drop in for a chat with this neighbour and that whenever we
+passed their way, always being cheerily welcomed and always pressed to
+stay a little longer.
+
+The French peasant is the most laborious, at the same time the most
+leisurely, individual in the world. Urgent indeed must be those
+farming operations that prevent him from enjoying a talk. Conversation,
+interchange of ideas, give and take by word of mouth, are as necessary
+to the Frenchman's well-being as oxygen to his lungs.
+
+"Man," writes Montesquieu, "is described as a sociable animal." From
+this point of view it appears to me that the Frenchman may be called
+more of a man than others; he is first and foremost a man, since he
+seems especially made for society.
+
+Elsewhere the same great writer adds:--"You may see in Paris individuals
+who have enough to live upon for the rest of their days, yet they labour
+so arduously as to shorten their days, in order, as they say, to assure
+themselves of a livelihood." These two marked characteristics are as
+true of the French peasant now-a-days as of the polite society described
+in the "Lettres Persanes." In the eighteenth century cultivated people
+did little else but talk. Morning, noon and night, their epigrammatic
+tongues were busy. Conversation in historic salons became a fine
+art. There are no such literary cteries in our time. What with one
+excitement and another, the Parisian world chats but has no time for
+real conversation. Perhaps for _Gauloiseries_, true Gallic salt, we must
+now go to the unlettered, the sons of the soil, whose ancestors were
+boors when wit sparkled among their social superiors.
+
+Here are one or two types illustrating both characteristics, excellent
+types in their way of the small peasant proprietor hereabouts, a class
+having no counterpart or approximation to a counterpart in England.
+
+The first visit I describe was paid one evening to an old gardener whom
+I will call the Pre A--. Bent partly with toil, partly with age,
+you would have at once supposed that his working days were well over,
+especially on learning his circumstances, for sole owner he was of the
+little domain to which he had now retired for the day. Of benevolent
+aspect, shrewd, every inch alive despite infirmities, he received his
+neighbour and her English guest with rustic but cordial urbanity, at
+once entering into conversation. With evident pride and pleasure he
+watched my glances at premises and garden, house and outbuildings
+ramshackle enough, even poverty-stricken to look at, here not an
+indication of comfortable circumstances much less of independent means;
+the bit of land half farm, half garden, however, was fairly well kept
+and of course productive.
+
+"Yes, this dwelling is mine and the two hectares (four acres four
+hundred and odd feet), aye," he added self-complacently, "and I have a
+little money besides."
+
+"Yet you live here all by yourself and still work for wages?" I asked.
+His reply was eminently characteristic. "I work for my children." These
+children he told me were two grown up sons, one of them being like
+himself a gardener, both having work. Thus in order to hoard up a little
+more for two able-bodied young men, here was a bent, aged man living
+penuriously and alone, his only companion being a beautiful and
+evidently much petted donkey. I ventured to express an English view
+of the matter, namely, the undesirability of encouraging idleness and
+self-indulgence in one's children by toiling and moiling for them in old
+age.
+
+He nodded his head.
+
+"You are right, all that you say is true, but so it is with me. I must
+work for my children."
+
+And thus blindly are brought about the parricidal tragedies that Zola,
+Guy de Maupassant and other novelists have utilized in fiction, and
+with which we are familiarized in French criminal reports--parents and
+grandparents got rid of for the sake of their coveted hoardings.
+
+Thus also are generated in the rich and leisured classes that intense
+selfishness of the rising generation so movingly portrayed in M.
+Hervieu's play, "La Course du Flambeau." No one who has witnessed Mme.
+Rjane's presentment of the adoring, disillusioned mother can ever
+forget it.
+
+On leaving, the Pre A---- presented us with grapes and pears, carefully
+selecting the finest for his English visitor.
+
+At the gate I threw a Parthian dart.
+
+"Don't work too hard," I said, whereupon came the burden of his song:
+
+"One must work for one's children."
+
+This good neighbour could neither read nor write, a quite exceptional
+case in these days. Our second visit was made to a person similarly
+situated, but belonging to a different order.
+
+Madame B----, a widow, was also advanced in years and also lived by
+herself on her little property, consisting of walled-in cottage and
+outhouses, with straggling garden or rather orchard, garden and field in
+one.
+
+This good woman is what country folks in these parts call rich. I have
+no doubt that an English farmeress in her circumstances would have the
+neatest little parlour, a tidy maid to wait upon her, and most likely
+take afternoon tea in a black silk gown. Our hostess here wore the dress
+of a poor but respectable working woman. Her interior was almost as bare
+and primitive as that of the Boer farmhouse in the Paris Exhibition.
+Although between six and seven o'clock, there was no sign whatever of
+preparation for an evening meal. Indeed on every side things looked
+poverty-stricken. Not a penny had evidently been spent upon kitchen or
+bedrooms for years and years, the brick floor of both being bare, the
+furniture having done duty for generations.
+
+This "rentire," or person living upon independent means, did not match
+her sordid surroundings. Although toil-worn, tanned and wrinkled, her
+face "brown as the ribbed sea-sand," there was a certain refinement
+about look, speech and manner, distinguishing her from the good man her
+neighbour. After a little conversation I soon found out that she had
+literary tastes.
+
+"Living alone and finding the winter evenings long I hire books from a
+lending library at Fontainebleau," she said.
+
+I opened my eyes in amazement. Seldom indeed had I heard of a peasant
+proprietor in France caring for books, much less spending money upon
+them.
+
+"And what do you read?" I asked.
+
+"Anything I can get," was the reply. "Madame's husband," here she looked
+at my friend, "has kindly lent me several."
+
+Among these I afterwards found had been Zola's "Rome" and "Le Dsastre"
+by the brothers Margueritte.
+
+Like the Pre A---- she had married children and entertained precisely
+the same notion of parental duty. The few sous spent upon such
+beguilement of long winter nights were most likely economized by some
+little deprivation. There is something extremely pathetic in this
+patriarchal spirit, this uncompromising, ineradicable resolve to hand
+down a little patrimony not only intact but enlarged.
+
+"Our peasants live too sordidly," observed a Frenchman to me a day or
+two later. "They carry thrift to the pitch of avarice and vice. Zola's
+'La Terre' is not without foundation on fact."
+
+And excellent as is the principle of forethought, invaluable as is
+the habit of laying by for a rainy day, I have at last come to the
+conclusion that of the two national weaknesses, French avarice
+and English lavishness and love of spending, the latter is more in
+accordance with progress and the spirit of the age.
+
+In another part of the village we called upon a hale old body of
+seventy-seven, who not only lived alone and did everything for herself
+indoors but the entire work of a market garden, every inch of the two
+and a half acres being, of course, her own. Piled against an inner
+wall we saw a dozen or so faggots each weighing, we were told, half a
+hundredweight. Will it be believed that this old woman had picked up
+and carried from the forest on her back every one of these faggots? The
+poor, or rather those who will, are allowed to glean firewood in all the
+State forests of France. Let no tourist bestow a few sous upon aged men
+and women bearing home such treasure-trove! Quite possibly the dole may
+affront some owner of houses and lands.
+
+As we inspected her garden, walls covered with fine grapes, tomatoes and
+melons, of splendid quality, to say nothing of vegetables in profusion,
+it seemed all the more difficult to reconcile facts so incongruous. Here
+was a market gardener on her own account, mistress of all she surveyed,
+glad as a gipsy to pick up sticks for winter use. But the burden of her
+story was the same:
+
+"Il faut travailler pour ses enfants" (one must work for one's
+children), she said.
+
+All these little farm-houses are so many homely fortresses, cottage and
+outhouses being securely walled in, a precaution necessary with aged,
+moneyed folks living absolutely alone.
+
+A fourth visit was paid to a charming old Philmon and Baucis, the best
+possible specimens of their class. The husband lay in bed, ill of an
+incurable malady, and spotlessly white were his tasselled nightcap,
+shirt and bedclothes. Very clean and neat too was the bedroom opening
+on to the little front yard, beneath each window of the one-storeyed
+dwelling being a brilliant border of asters. The housewife also was a
+picture of tidiness, her cotton gown carefully patched and scrupulously
+clean. This worthy couple are said to be worth fifty thousand francs.
+The wife, a sexagenarian, does all the work of the house besides
+waiting on her good man, to whom she is devoted, but a married son
+and daughter-in-law share her duties at night. Here was no touch of
+sordidness or suggestion of "La Terre," instead a delightful picture of
+rustic dignity and ease. The housewife sold us half a bushel of pears,
+these two like their neighbours living by the produce of their small
+farm and garden.
+
+I often dropped in upon Madame B---- to whom even morning calls were
+acceptable.
+
+On the occasion of my farewell visit she had something pretty to
+say about one of my own novels, a French translation of which I had
+presented her.
+
+"I suppose," I said, "that you have some books of your own?"
+
+"Here they are," she said, depositing an armful on the table. "But I
+have never read much, and mostly _bibelots_" (trifles.)
+
+Her poor little library consisted of _bibelots_ indeed, a history of
+Jeanne d'Arc for children, and half a dozen other works, mostly school
+prizes of the kind awarded before school prizes in France were worth the
+paper on which they were printed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+LARCHANT.
+
+There is a certain stimulating quality of elasticity and crispness in
+the French atmosphere which our own does not possess. France, moreover,
+with its seven climates--for the description of these, see Reclus'
+Geography--does undoubtedly offer longer, less broken, spells of hot
+summer weather than the United Kingdom. But let me for once and for all
+dispel a widespread illusion. The late Lord Lytton, when Ambassador
+in Paris, used to say that in the French capital you could procure any
+climate you pleased. And experience proves that without budging an inch
+you may in France get as many and as rapid climatic changes as anywhere
+else under the sun. At noon in mid-May last I was breakfasting with
+friends on the Champs Elyses, when my hostess put a match to the fire
+and my host jumped up and lighted six wax candles. So dense had become
+the heavens that we could no longer see to handle knives and forks!
+Hail, wind, darkness and temperature recalled a November squall at home.
+Yet the day before I had enjoyed perfect summer weather in the Jardin
+d'Acclimitation. Invariableness is no more an attribute of the French
+climate than our own. Wherever we go we must take a change of dress, for
+all the world as if we were bound for the other side of the Tweed.
+
+My first Sunday at Bourron, on this third visit, was of perfect
+stillness, unclouded brilliance and southern languor, heralding, so we
+fondly imagined, the very morrow for an excursion.
+
+In the night a strong wind rose up, but as we had ordered a carriage for
+Larchant, and as carriages in these parts are not always to be had,
+as, moreover, grown folks no more than children like to defer their
+pleasure, off we set, two of the party on cycles forming a body guard.
+There seemed no likelihood of rain and in the forest we should not feel
+the wind.
+
+For the first mile or two all went well. Far ahead of us our cyclists
+bowled gaily along in the forest avenues, all of us being sheltered from
+the wind. It was not till we skirted a wide opening that we felt the
+full force of the tornado, soon overtaking our blowzed, dishevelled
+companions, both on foot and looking miserable enough.
+
+We re-entered the forest, and a little later, emerging from the fragrant
+depths of a pine wood, got our first view of Larchant, coming suddenly
+upon what looks like a cathedral towering above the plain, at its base
+a clustering village, whitewashed brown-roofed houses amid vineyards and
+orchards.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A grandiose view it is, recalling the minaret of Mansourah near Tclemcen
+in Algeria, that gigantic monolith apparently carved out of Indian gold
+and cleft in two like a pomegranate.
+
+Slowly we wound up towards the village, the wind, or rather hurricane,
+gathering in force as we went. It was indeed no easy task to get a
+nearer view of the church; more than once we were compelled to beat
+a retreat, whilst it seemed really unsafe to linger underneath such a
+ruin.
+
+Imagine the tower of St. Jacques in the Rue de Rivoli split in two,
+the upright half standing in a bare wind-swept level, and you have
+some faint notion of Larchant. On nearer approach such an impression of
+grandeur is by no means diminished. This magnificent parish church,
+in part a ruin, in part restored, rather grows upon one upon closer
+inspection. Reparation, for want of funds, has stopped short at the
+absolutely necessary. The body of the church has been so far restored as
+to be fit for use, but its crowning glory, the tower, remains a torso.
+
+The front view suggests no such dilapidation. How long will the shell
+of that lofty twelfth century tower remain standing? To my mind it hangs
+over the low, one-storeyed houses at its feet, a veritable sword of
+Damocles, sooner or later sure to fall with crushing force. The porch
+shows much beautiful carving, unfortunately defaced, and the interior
+some perfect specimens of pure Gothic arches, the whole whitewashed and
+bare as a barn.
+
+Larchant in the middle ages was a famous pilgrimage, and in the days of
+Charles IX. a halting stage on the road to Italy. It does not seem to
+attract many English pilgrims at the present time. Anyhow tea-making
+here seems a wholly unknown art. In a fairly clean inn, however, a
+good-natured landlady allowed us to make ourselves at home alike
+in kitchen and pantry. One of our party unearthed a time-honoured
+tea-pot--we had of course taken the precaution of carrying tea with
+us--one by one milk and sugar were forthcoming in what may be called
+wholesale fashion, milk-jugs and sugar-basins being apparently articles
+of superfluity, and in company of a charming old dog and irresistible
+kitten, also of some quiet wayfarers, we five-o'clocked merrily enough.
+
+Our business at Larchant was not wholly archaeological. Buffeted as we
+were by the hurricane, we managed to pay a visit in search of eggs and
+poultry for the table at home.
+
+If peasant and farming life in France certainly from time to time
+reminds us of Zola's "La Terre," we are also reminded of an aspect which
+the great novelist ignores. As will be seen from the following sketch
+sordidness and aspiration oft times, I am almost tempted to say, and
+most often, go hand in hand.
+
+We see one generation addicted to an existence so laborious and material
+as to have no counterpart in England; under the same roof growing up
+another, sharing all the advantages of social and intellectual progress.
+
+Not far from the church we called upon a family of large and wealthy
+farmers, owners of the soil they cultivate, millionaires by comparison
+with our neighbours at Bourron.
+
+We arrived in the midst of a busy time, a steam corn thresher plying in
+the vast farm-yard. The interior of the big, straggling farm-house we
+did not see, but two aged women dressed like poor peasants received
+us in the kitchen, a dingy, unswept, uninviting place, as are most
+farm-house kitchens in France. These old ladies were respectively
+mother-in-law and aunt of the farmer, whose wife, the real mistress of
+the house, soon came in. This tall, stout, florid, brawny-armed woman
+was evidently what French folks call _une matresse femme_, a first-rate
+housewife and manager; a somewhat awe-inspiring person she looked as she
+stood before us, arms akimbo, her short coarse serge skirt showing shoes
+well acquainted with stable and neat-house, one dirty blue cotton apron
+worn over another equally dirty. Now, my hostess, as I have said, wanted
+to purchase some poultry for the table, and here comes in the moral
+of my story. Vainly the lady begged and begged again for a couple of
+chickens. "But we want them for our Parisians," the three farming women
+reiterated, one echoing the other. "Our Parisians, our Parisians,"
+the words were repeated a dozen times. And as was explained to me
+afterwards, "our Parisians," for whom the pick of the poultry yard
+was being reserved, were the two sons of the rather forbidding-looking
+matron before us, young gentlemen being educated in a Paris Lyce, and
+both of them destined for the learned professions!
+
+This side of rural life, this ambition, akin to what we see taking
+quite another form among ourselves, Zola does not sufficiently realize.
+Shocking indeed were the miserliness and materialism of such existences
+but for the element of self-denial, this looking ahead for those to
+follow after. How differently, for instance, the farm-house and its
+group must have appeared, but for the evident pride and hopes centred in
+_nos Parisiens_, who knows?--perhaps youths destined to attain the first
+rank in official or political callings!
+
+The farther door of the smoke-dried kitchen opened on to the farm-yard,
+around which were stables and neat-houses. In the latter the mistress
+of the house proudly drew our attention to a beautiful blue cow, grey
+in our ignorance we had called it, one of a score or more of superb kine
+all now reclining on their haunches before being turned out to pasture.
+In front, cocks and hens disported themselves on a dunghill, whilst
+beyond, the steam corn thresher was at work, every hand being called
+into requisition. No need here for particulars and figures. The
+superabundant wealth, so carefully husbanded for the two youths in
+Paris, was self-evident.
+
+The tornado, with threatening showers and the sight of a huge tree just
+uprooted by the road side, necessitated the shortest possible cut home.
+In fair weather a prolongation of our drive would have given us a sight
+of some famous rocks of this rocky forest. But we carried home memories
+enough for one day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+RECLOSES.
+
+This ancient village, reached by the forest, is one of the most
+picturesque of the many picturesque places hereabouts. Quitting a
+stretch of pinewood we traverse flat cultivated land, gradually winding
+up towards a long straggling village surmounted by a lofty church tower
+of grey stone. On either side of this street are enclosed farm-houses,
+the interiors being as pictorial as can be imagined. Untidy as are most
+French homesteads, for peasant farmers pay little court to the Graces,
+there is always a bit of flower garden. Sometimes this flower garden
+is aerial, a bower of roses on the roof sometimes amid the incongruous
+surroundings of pig styes or manure heaps. This region is a petunia
+land; wherever we go we find a veritable blaze of petunia blossoms, pale
+mauve, deepest rose, purple and white massed together without order or
+view to effect. In one of the little fortresses--for so these antique
+farmhouses may be called--we saw a rustic piazza, pillars and roof of
+rude unhewn stone blazing with petunias, no attempt whatever at making
+the structure whole, symmetrical or graceful to the eye. It seems as if
+these homely though rich farmers, or rather farmers' wives, could not do
+without flowers, above the street jutting many aerial gardens, the only
+touch of beauty in the work-a-day picture. These interiors would supply
+artists with the most captivating subjects. The women, their skins brown
+and wrinkled as ripe, shelled walnuts, their head-dress a blue and white
+kerchief neatly folded and knotted, the expression of their faces shrewd
+and kindly, all contribute to the charm of the scene.
+
+Here as elsewhere the young women and girls affect a little fashion and
+finery on Sundays.
+
+We should not know unless we were told that Recloses was one of the
+richest villages in these parts. On this Sunday, September 1st, 1901, in
+one place a steam thresher was at work, although for the most part
+folks seemed to be taking their ease in their holiday garb. Perhaps the
+difficulty of procuring the machine accounted for the fact of seeing it
+on a Sunday.
+
+One of the farm-yards showed a charming menagerie of poultry and the
+prettiest rabbits in the world, all disporting themselves in most
+amicable fashion. Here, as elsewhere, when we stopped to admire, the
+housewife came out, pleased to interchange a few words with us. The
+sight of Recloses is not, however, its long line of little walled-in
+farm-houses, but the curious rocky platform at the end of the village,
+perforated with holes always full of water, and the stupendous view
+thence obtained--an ocean of sombre green unrelieved by a single sail.
+
+Already the vast panorama of forest shows signs of autumn, light touches
+of yellow relieving the depths of solemn green. On such a day of varied
+cloudland the perspective must be quite different, and perhaps even more
+beautiful than under a burning cloudless sky, no soft gradations between
+the greens and the blues. The little pools or perforations breaking
+the surface of the broad platform, acres of rocks, are, I believe,
+unexplained phenomena. In the driest season these openings contain
+water, presumably forced upwards from hidden springs. The pools, just
+now covered with green slime, curiously spot the grey surface of the
+rocks.
+
+If, leaving the world of forest to our right, we continue our journey
+in the direction of Chapelle la Reine, we overlook a vast plain the
+population of which is very different from that of the smiling fertile
+prosperous valley of the Loing. This plain, extending to tampes and
+Pithiviers, might, I am told, possibly have suggested to Zola some
+scenes and characters of "La Terre." A French friend of mine, well
+acquainted with these parts, tells me that at any rate there, if
+anywhere, the great novelist might have found suggestions for such a
+work. The soil is arid, the cultivation is primitive in the extreme and
+the people are rough and uncouth. The other day an English resident at
+Marlotte, when cycling among these villages of the plain inquired his
+way of a countryman.
+
+"You are not a Frenchman?" quoth the latter before giving the desired
+information.
+
+"No I am not" was the reply.
+
+"You are not an American?"
+
+"No, I am an Englishman."
+
+"Ah!" was the answer, "I smelt you out sure enough" (_Je vous ai bien
+senti_). Whereupon he proceeded to put the wayfarer on his right road.
+
+As a rule French peasants are exceedingly courteous to strangers, but
+these good people of the plain seldom come in contact with the tourist
+world, their country not being sufficiently picturesque even to attract
+the cyclist.
+
+The curious thirteenth-century church of Recloses had long been an art
+pilgrimage. It contains, or at least should contain, some of the most
+wonderful wood carvings in France; figures and groups of figures
+highly realistic in the best sense of the word. These sculptures,
+unfortunately, we were not able to inspect a second time; exhibited in
+the Paris Exhibition they had not yet been replaced.
+
+It is a beautiful drive from Recloses to Bourron by the Croix de Saint
+Hrem. A little way out of the village we came upon a pretty scene,
+people, in family groups, playing croquet under the trees. Dancing also
+goes on in summer as in the olden time. It was curious as we drove along
+to note the behaviour of my friend's dog: it never for a moment closed
+its eyes, and yet there was nothing to look at but avenue after avenue
+of trees. What could the little animal find so fascinating in the
+somewhat monotonous sight? A friend at home assures me that a pet of her
+own enjoyed drives from purely snobbish motives; his great gratification
+arising from the sense of superiority over fellow dogs compelled to
+trudge on foot. But in these woodland solitudes there was no room for
+such a sentiment, not a dog being visible, only now and then a cyclist
+flashing by.
+
+There is no more splendid cycling ground in the world than this forest
+of Fontainebleau.
+
+Shakespeare says:--
+
+ "This guest of summer,
+ The temple-haunting martlet, does approve
+ By his loved mansionry that the heaven's breath
+ Smells wooingly here: no jutty frieze, buttress,
+ Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made
+ His pendent bed, and procreant cradle: Where they
+ Most breed and haunt, I have observed the air
+ Is delicate."
+
+About this time at Bourron the village street was alive with swallows
+preparing, I presume, for departure southwards. A beautiful sight it
+was to see these winged congregations evidently concerting their future
+movements.
+
+Another feature to be mentioned is the number of large handsome moths
+frequenting these regions. One beautiful creature as large as a swallow
+used to fly into our dining room every evening for warmth; fastening
+itself to the wall it would there remain undisturbed until the morning.
+
+I finish these reminiscences of Bourron by the following citation from
+Balzac's "Ursule Mirout":--
+
+
+"On entering Nemours at five o'clock in the morning, Ursule woke up
+feeling quite ashamed of her untidiness, and of encountering Savinien's
+look of admiration. During the time that the diligence took to come
+from Bouron (_sic_), where it stopped a few minutes, the young man had
+observed Ursule. He had noted the candour of her mind, the beauty of her
+person, the whiteness of her complexion, the delicacy of her features,
+the charm of the voice which had uttered the short and expressive
+sentence, in which the poor child said everything, while wishing to say
+nothing. In short I do not know what presentiment made him see in Ursule
+the woman whom the doctor had depicted, framed in gold, with these magic
+words:--'Seven to eight hundred thousand francs!'"
+
+Holiday tourists in these parts cannot do better than put this
+love-story in their pockets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+NEMOURS.
+
+"Who knows Nemours," wrote Balzac, "knows that nature there is as
+beautiful as art," and again he dwells upon the charm of the sleepy
+little town memorialized in "Ursule Mirout."
+
+The delicious valley of Loing indeed fascinated Balzac almost as much as
+his beloved Touraine.
+
+As his recently published letters to Madame Hanska have shown us,
+several of his greatest novels were written in this neighbourhood,
+whilst in the one named above we have a setting as striking as that of
+"Eugenie Grandet" or "Batrix." A ten minutes' railway journey brings
+us to Nemours, one of the few French towns, by the way, in which Arthur
+Young lost his temper. Here is his own account of the incident:--
+
+"Sleep at Nemours, where we met with an innkeeper who exceeded in
+knavery all we had met with, either in France or Italy: for supper,
+we had a _soupe maigre_, a partridge and a chicken roasted, a plate of
+celery, a small cauliflower, two bottles of poor _vin du Pays_, and a
+dessert of two biscuits and four apples: here is the bill:--Potage
+1 liv. 10f.--Perdrix 2 liv. 10f.--Poulet 2 liv.--Cleri 1 liv.
+4f.--Choufleur 2 liv.--Pain et dessert 2 liv.--Feu et appartement 6
+liv.--Total 19 liv. 8f. Against so impudent an extortion we remonstrated
+severely but in vain. We then insisted on his signing the bill, which,
+after many evasions, he did, _ l'toile, Foulliare_. But having
+been carried to the inn, not as the star, but the _cu de France_, we
+suspected some deceit: and going out to examine the premises, we found
+the sign to be really the _cu_, and learned on enquiry that his own
+name was Roux, instead of _Foulliare_: he was not prepared for this
+detection, or for the execration we poured on such infamous conduct; but
+he ran away in an instant and hid himself till we were gone. In justice
+to the world, however, such a fellow ought to be marked out."
+
+I confess I do not myself find such charges excessive. From a very
+different motive, Nemours put me as much out of temper as it had done
+my great predecessor a hundred years before. Will it be believed that a
+town memorialized by the great, perhaps _the_ greatest, French novelist,
+could not produce its title of honour, in other words a copy of "Ursule
+Mirout"?
+
+This town of 4,000 and odd souls and chef-lieu of department does not
+possess a bookseller's shop. We did indeed see in a stationer's window
+one or two penny books, among these an abridged translation of "Uncle
+Tom's Cabin." But a friendly wine merchant, who seemed to take my
+reproaches very much to heart, assured us that in the municipal library
+all Balzac's works were to be found, besides many valuable books dealing
+with local history.
+
+Cold comfort this for tourists who want to buy a copy of the Nemours
+story! As we stroll about the grass-grown streets, we feel that
+railways, telephones and the rest have very little changed Nemours since
+Balzac's descriptions, written three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+The sweet and pastoral surroundings of the place are in strong contrast
+with the sordid next-of-kin peopling the pages of his romance. Beyond
+the fine old church of rich grey stone, you obtain as enchanting a
+view as the valley of the Loing can show, a broad, crystal-clear river
+winding amid picturesque architecture, richest and most varied foliage,
+ash and weeping willow mingling with deeper-hued beech and alder. It is
+difficult, almost impossible, to describe the charm of this riverside
+scenery. In one passage of his novel, Balzac compares the view to the
+scenery of an opera, and in very truth every feature forms a whole so
+harmonious as to suggest artistic arrangement.
+
+Nature and accident have effected the happiest possible combination
+of wood, water and building stone. Nothing is here to mar the complete
+picture. Grandly the cathedral-like church and fine old chteau stand
+out to-day against the brilliant sky, soft grey stone and dark brown
+making subdued harmonies. Formerly Nemours was surrounded by woods,
+hence its name. People are said to attain here a very great age, life
+being tranquil and the nature of the people somewhat lethargic.
+
+Amongst the more energetic inhabitants are a lady dentist and her
+sister, who between them do a first rate business.
+
+French peasants never dream of indulging in false teeth; such an idea
+would never enter the head of even the richest. But an aching tooth
+interferes with the labours of the farm, and must be got rid of at
+any cost. This young lady _chirurgien et dentiste_, such is the name
+figuring on her door plate, is not only most expert in using the
+forceps, but is attractive and pretty.
+
+Her charges are two francs for a visit or operation; in partnership
+with her is a sister who does the accounts, and as nuns and sisters
+of charity unprovided with certificates are no longer allowed to draw
+teeth, act as midwives and cut off limbs, country doctors and dentists
+of either sex have now a fair chance.
+
+No town in this part of France suffered more during the German invasion.
+The municipal authorities had at first decided upon making a bold stand,
+thus endeavouring to check the enemy's advance on Paris. Differences
+of opinion arose, prudential counsels prevailed, and it was through a
+mistaken order that a Prussian detachment was attacked near the town.
+The consequences were appalling. The station was burned to the ground,
+enormous contributions in money and material were exacted from the town,
+some of the authorities were made to travel on the railways with
+the invaders, and others were carried off to remote fortresses of
+Brandenburg and there kept as prisoners for nine months.
+
+The account of all these incidents, written by a victim, may be
+consulted in a volume of the town library.
+
+If people frequently attain the age of a hundred in Nemours, as I was
+assured, it is rather due to placid temperament than to intellectual
+torpor. The town possesses learned societies, and a member of its
+archaeological association has published a book of great local interest
+and value, viz:--"Nemours, Temps Gologiques, Temps Prhistoriques,
+Temps Historiques, par E. Doigneau, Membre de la Socit Archologique
+de Seine-et-Marne, Ancien Vice Prsident de la section de Fontainebleau,
+Paris."
+
+Strange to say, although this neighbourhood has offered a rich field for
+prehistoric research, Nemours as yet possesses no museum, I do verily
+believe the first French town of any size I have ever found in France
+without one at least in embryo. For the cyclist the run from Bourron
+to Nemours is delightful, on the hottest day in the year spinning along
+broad well-wooded roads, with lovely perspectives from time to time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+LA CHARIT-SUR-LOIRE.
+
+From Bourron, in September, 1900, I journeyed with a friend to La
+Charit, a little town four hours off.
+
+It is ever with feelings of pleasurable anticipation that I approach
+any French town for the first time. The number of these, alas! now being
+few, I have of late years been compelled to restrain curiosity, leaving
+one or two dreamed-of spots for the future, saying with Wordsworth:--
+
+ "Should life be dull and spirits low,
+ 'Twill soothe us in our sorrow,
+ That earth has something yet to show,
+ The bonny holms of Yarrow."
+
+La Charit, picturesque of the picturesque--according to French
+accounts, English, we have none--for many years had been a Yarrow to me,
+a reserve of delight, held back from sheer Epicureanism.
+
+As, on the 12th of September, the cumbersome old omnibus rattled over
+the unpaved streets, both to myself and fellow traveller came a feeling
+of disenchantment. We had apparently reached one more of those sleepy
+little _chefs-lieux_ familiar to both, places of interest certainly, the
+sleepiest having some architectural gem or artistic treasure. But here
+was surely no Yarrow!
+
+A few minutes later we discovered our error. Hardly had we reached our
+rooms in the more than old-fashioned Htel du Grand Monarque, than from
+a side window, we caught sight of the Loire; so near, indeed, lay the
+bright, blue river, that we could almost have thrown pebbles into its
+clear depths; quitting the hotel, half a dozen steps, no more were
+needed, an enchanting scene burst upon the view.
+
+Most beautiful is the site of La Charit, built terrace-wise, not on the
+skirts but on the very hem of the Loire, here no revolutionary torrent,
+sweeping away whole villages, leaving only church steeples visible above
+the engulfing waters, as I had once seen it at Nantes, but a broad,
+smooth, crystal expanse of sky-blue. Over against the handsome stone
+bridge to-day having its double in the limpid water, we see a little
+islanded hamlet crowned with picturesque church tower; and, placing
+ourselves midway between the town and its suburban twin, obtain vast and
+lovely perspectives. Westward, gradually purpling as evening wears on,
+rises the magnificent height of Sancerre, below, amid low banks bordered
+with poplar, flowing the Loire. Eastward, looking towards Nevers, our
+eyes rest on the same broad sheet of blue; before us, straight as
+an arrow, stretches the French road of a pattern we know so well, an
+apparently interminable avenue of plane or poplar trees. The river is
+low at this season, and the velvety brown sands recall the sea-shore
+when the tide is out. Exquisite, at such an hour are the reflections,
+every object having its mirrored self in the transparent waves, the
+lights and shadows of twilight making lovely effects.
+
+As is the case with Venice, La Charit should be reached by river, and a
+pity it seems that little steamers do not ply between all the principal
+towns on the Loire. How enchanting, like the immortal Vert-Vert, of
+Gresset's poem, to travel from Nevers to the river's mouth!
+
+If I had headed this paper merely with the words "La Charit," I should
+surely be supposed to treat of some charitable institution in France,
+or of charity as worked out in the abstract, for this first of Christian
+virtues has given the place its name, presumably perpetuating the
+charitableness of its abbatial founders. Just upon two thousand years
+ago, some pious monks of the order of Cluny settled here, calling their
+foundation La Charit. Gradually a town grew around the abbey walls, and
+what better name for any than this? So La Charit it was in early feudal
+times, and La Charit it remains in our own.
+
+The place itself is as antiquated and behindhand as any I have seen in
+France, which is saying a good deal. A French gentleman, native of
+these parts, told me that in his grandfather's time our Htel du Grand
+Monarque enjoyed a fine reputation. In many respects it deserves the
+same still, excellent beds, good cooking, quietude and low prices not
+being so common as they might be in French provincial inns. The house,
+too, is curious, what with its spiral stone staircases, little passages
+leading to one room here, to another there--as if in former days
+travellers objected to walls that adjoined those of other people--and
+unaccountable levels, it is impossible to understand whether you were
+on the first floor or the second floor, house-top, or basement. Our
+bedrooms, for instance, reached by one of the spiral stone staircases
+just named never used by myself without apprehension, landed us on the
+edge of a poultry yard; I suppose a wide bit of roof had been converted
+into this use, but it was quite impossible to make out any architectural
+plan. These rooms adjoining this _basse-cour_, hens and chicks
+would enter unceremoniously and pick up the crumbs we threw to them.
+Fastidious tourists might resent so primitive a state of things, the
+hotel, I should say, remaining exactly what it was under the Ancien
+Rgime. The beauty and interest of various kinds around, more than make
+up for small drawbacks. Here the archaeologist will not grudge several
+days. Ruined as it is, the ancient abbey may be reconstructed in the
+mind's eye by the help of what we see before us. The fragments of
+crumbling wall, the noble tower and portal, the delicately sculptured
+pillars, cornices, and arches, enable us to build up the whole, just
+as Cuvier made out an entire skeleton from the examination of a single
+bone. These grand architectural fragments have not been neglected by the
+learned. Unfortunately, and exceptionally, La Charit possesses neither
+public library nor museum, but at Nevers the traveller would surely find
+a copy of Prosper Merime's "Notes Archologiques" in which is a minute
+account of these.
+
+Alike without and within the ruins show a medley of styles and richest
+ornamentation.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The superb north-west tower, that forms so striking an object from the
+river, is said to be in the Burgundian style; rather should we put it
+after a Burgundian style, so varied and heterogeneous are the churches
+coming under this category. Again, the guide books inform us that
+the open space between this tower and the church was occupied by the
+narthex, a vast outer portico of ancient Burgundian churches used for
+the reception of penitents, catechumens, and strangers. All interested
+in ecclesiastical architecture should visit the abbey church of Vzelay,
+which possesses a magnificent narthex of two storeys, restored by the
+late Viollet le Duc. Vzelay, by the way, may be easily reached from La
+Charit.
+
+Next to the elaborate sculptures of this grand tower, will be noted the
+superb colour of the building stone, carved out of deep-hued gold it
+looks under the burning blue sky. And of a piece are arch, portico and
+column, one and all helping us to reconstruct the once mighty abbey,
+home of a brotherhood so powerful as to necessitate disciplinary
+measures on the part of the Pope.
+
+The interior of the church shows the same elaborateness of detail, and
+the same mixture of styles, the Romanesque-Burgundian predominating, so,
+at least, affirm authorities.
+
+The idler and lover of the picturesque will not find time hang heavy on
+his hands here. Very sweet are the riverside views, no matter on which
+side we obtain them, and the quaintest little staircases of streets run
+from base to summit of the pyramidally-built town. A climb of a quarter
+of an hour takes us to an admirable coign of vantage just above the
+abbey church, and commanding a view of Sancerre and the river. That
+little town, so splendidly placed, is celebrated for its eight months'
+defence as a Huguenot stronghold.
+
+La Charit, with most mediaeval towns, was fortified, one old city gate
+still remaining.
+
+To-day, as when that charming writer, mile Montgut visited the
+place more than a generation ago, the townspeople ply their crafts and
+domestic callings abroad. In fine weather, no work that can possibly be
+done in the open air is done within four walls. Another curious feature
+of these engaging old streets, is the number of blacksmiths' shops. It
+would seem as if all the horses, mules, and donkeys of the Nivre were
+brought hither to be shod, the smithy fires keeping up a perpetual
+illumination.
+
+A third and still more noteworthy point is the infrequency--absence, I
+am inclined to say--of cabarets. Soberest of the sober, orderliest of
+the orderly, appear these good folks of La Charit, les Caritates as
+they are called, nor, apparently, has tradition demoralised them. One
+might expect that a town dedicated to the virtue of almsgiving would
+abound in beggars. Not one did we see.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+POUGUES.
+
+If an ugly name could kill a place, Pougues must surely have been ruined
+as a health resort centuries ago. Coming, too, after that soothing,
+harmoniously named La Charit, could any configuration of letters grate
+more harshly on the ear? Truth to tell, my travelling companion and
+myself had a friendly little altercation about Pougues. It seemed
+impossible to believe pleasant things of a town so labelled. But the
+reputation of Pougues dates from Hercules and Julius Caesar, both
+heroes, it is said, having had recourse to its mineral springs! Coming
+from legend to history, we find that Pougues, or, at least, the waters
+of Pougues, were patronised by the least objectionable son of Catherine
+de Medicis, Henri II. of France and runaway King of Poland. Imputing
+his disorders to sorcery, he was thus reassured by a sensible physician
+named Pidoux: "Sire, the malady from which you suffer is due to no
+witchcraft. Lead a quiet life for ten weeks, and drink the water of
+Pougues." The best king France ever had, namely, the gay Gascon, and
+after him Louis XIII., by no means one of the worst, had recourse to
+Pougues waters; also that arch-voluptuary and arch-despot, the Sun-King,
+who imagined that even syntax and prosody must bow to his will.
+[Footnote: One day the young king ordered his carriage, saying, "_mon_
+carrosse," instead of "_ma_ carrosse," the French word being derived
+from the Italian feminine, _carrozza_. On being gently corrected, the
+king flew into a passion, declaring that masculine he had called it, and
+masculine it should remain, which it has done to this day, so the story
+runs. Let the Republic look to it!] And Madame de Sevign--for whom,
+however, I have scant love, for did she not hail the revocation of the
+Edict of Nantes?--Madame de Sevign honoured Pougues with an epigram.
+
+A second Purgatory she styled the douches, and, doubtless, in those
+non-washing days, a second Purgatory it would have been to most folks.
+
+To Pougues, nevertheless, we went, and if these notes induce the more
+enterprising of my countrypeople to do the same next summer, they are
+not likely to repent of the experiment. Never, indeed, was a little
+Eden of coolness, freshness, and greenery more abominably used by its
+sponsors, whilst the name of so many French townlings are a poem in
+themselves!
+
+From a view of sky blue waters and smooth brown sands we were
+transported to a world of emerald green verdure and richest foliage,
+interpenetrated with golden light. On this 14th of September the warmth
+and dazzlingness of mid-summer still reigned at Pougues; and the scenery
+in which we suddenly found ourselves, bosquets, dells, and glades, with
+all the charm but without the savageness of the forest, recalled the
+loveliest lines of the laziest poet:--
+
+ "Was naught around but images of rest,
+ And flowery beds, that slumberous influence kest[1],
+ Sleep-soothing groves and quiet lawns between,
+ From poppies breathed; and beds of pleasant green."
+
+[Footnote 1: Cast]
+
+A drive of a few minutes had landed us in the heart of this little
+Paradise, baths and Casino standing in the midst of park-like grounds.
+Apparently Pougues, that is to say, the Pougues-les-Eaux of later
+days, has been cut out of natural woodland, the Casino gardens and
+its surroundings being rich in forest trees of superb growth and
+great variety. The wealth of foliage gives this new fashionable little
+watering-place an enticingly rural appearance, nor is the attraction
+of water wholly wanting. To quote once more a most quotable, if little
+read, poet:--
+
+ "Meantime, unnumbered glittering streamlets played,
+ And hurled everywhere their water's sheen,
+ That, as they bickered through the sunny glade,
+ Though restless still, themselves a lulling murmur made."
+
+A pretty little lake, animated with swans, varies the woodland scenery,
+and tropical birds in an aviary lend brilliant bits of colour. The
+usual accessories of a health resort are, of course, here--reading room,
+concert hall, theatre, and other attractions, rapidly turning the place
+into a lesser Vichy. The number and magnificence of the hotels, the
+villas and _cottages_, that have sprung up on every side, bespeak the
+popularity of Pougues-les-Eaux, as it is now styled, the surname adding
+more dignity than harmoniousness. One advantage Pougues possesses over
+its rivals, is position. At Aix-les-Bains, Plombires, Salins, and how
+many other inland spas, you are literally wedged in between shelving
+hills. If you want to enjoy wide horizons, and anything like a breeze,
+you must get well outside the town. Never in hot, dusty, crowded
+cities have I felt so half-suffocated as at the two first named places.
+Pougues, on the contrary, lies in a broad expanse of beautifully varied
+woodland and champaign, no more appropriate site conceivable for the now
+popular air-cure. "Pougues-les-Eaux, Cure d'Eau and Cure d'Air," is
+now its proud title, folks flocking hither, not only to imbibe its
+delicious, ice-cold, sparkling waters, but to drink in its highly
+nourishing air. The iron-gaseous waters resemble in properties those of
+Spa and Vichy. From one to five tumblers are ordered a day, according
+to the condition of the drinker, a little stroll between each dose being
+advisable. With regard to the air-cure, visitors are reminded that at
+Pougues they find the four kinds of walking exercise recommended by a
+German specialist, namely, that on quite level ground; secondly, a
+very gradual climb; thirdly, a somewhat steeper bit of up-hill; and,
+fourthly, the really arduous ascent of Mont Givre. In order to entice
+health-seekers, all kinds of gratifications await them on the summit,
+restaurant, dairy, reading room, tennis court, and croquet ground, to
+say nothing of a panorama almost unrivalled in eastern France. We have,
+indeed, climbed the Eiffel Tower, in other words, are on a level with
+that final stage from which floats the Tricolour. Looking east we behold
+the sombre Morvan and Nevers rising above the Loire, whilst westward,
+beyond the plain and the Loire, may be descried the cathedral of
+Bourges. How many regions visited and revisited by myself now lie before
+my eyes as on a map--the Berri, Georges Sand's country, the little
+Celtic kingdom of the Morvan, on the borders of which, for so many
+years, that charming writer, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, made his home;
+the Nivernais, with its souvenirs of Vert-Vert and Mazarin, or, rather,
+Mazarin and Vert-Vert, the Department of the Allier made from the
+ancient province of the Bourbonnais.
+
+A wanderer in France should never be without his Arthur Young. That
+"wise and honest traveller," of course, had been before us, but
+travelling in a contrary direction. "From the hill that descends to
+Pougues," he wrote on his way from Nevers to Fontainebleau, in 1790,
+"is an extensive view to the north, and after Pouilly a (_sic_) fine
+scenery, with the Loire doubling through it." But the great farmer made
+this journey in mid-winter, thus missing its charm. And Arthur Young
+was ever too intent upon crops and roots to notice wild flowers. Had
+he traversed this region earlier in the year, he might have missed an
+exquisite feature, namely, the sweeps of autumn crocus. Just now the
+rich pastures around Pougues, as well as suburban lawns and wayside
+spaces, were tinted with delicate mauve, the ground being literally
+carpeted with these flowers. It was as if the lightest possible veil of
+pale purple covered the turf, the same profusion being visible on every
+side.
+
+One final word about this sweet and most unmusically named place. On no
+occasion and nowhere have I been received with more cordiality than
+at dear little Pougues, a place I was told there utterly ignored by my
+country people. I do honestly believe, indeed, that myself and fellow
+traveller were the first English folk to wander about those delicious
+gardens, and taste the incomparable waters, cool, sparkling,
+invigorating as those of Spa.
+
+One enterprising proprietor of an excellent hotel was so anxious to
+secure an English _clientle_, the best _clientle_ in the world, so
+hotel keepers aver, that she offered me a handsome percentage on any
+visitors I would send her. In the most delicate manner I could command,
+I gave her to understand that my inquiries about Pougues were not made
+from a business point of view, but that I should certainly proclaim its
+many attractions on the house-tops.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+NEVERS AND MOULINS.
+
+I found the well-remembered Htel de France much as I had left it, just
+upon twenty years before, every whit as quiet, comfortable, and moderate
+in price, indeed, one of the best provincial hotels of France. The dear
+old woman then employed as waitress, had, of course, long since gone
+to her rest, and the landlord and landlady were new to me. But, the
+traditions of an excellent house were evidently kept up, accommodation,
+meanwhile, having been greatly enlarged.
+
+A place is like a book; if worth knowing at all, to be returned to again
+and again. After the first brief visit so many years ago, I wrote,
+"I envy the traveller who for the first time stands on the bridge of
+Nevers." And more imposing, more exhilarating still, seemed the
+view from the same spot now; under the brilliant sky, in the clear
+atmosphere, every feature standing out as in a mosaic proudly dominating
+all, the Cathedral, with its mass of sombre architecture; stretching
+wide to right and left, the gay, prosperous-looking city; white villas
+rising one above the other, hanging gardens and terraced lawns, making
+greenery and verdure in mid-air. On the occasion of my first visit in
+August, 1881, the Loire was so low as to appear a mere thread of palest
+blue amid white sands; at the time I now write of, broad and beautiful
+it flowed beneath the noble bridge, a deep twilight sky reflected in its
+limpid waters.
+
+How well I remember the first sight of this scene years ago! Then it was
+early morning of market day, and, pouring in from the country, I had
+met crowds of peasants with their products, the men in blue blouses, the
+women in neat white coiffes, some bearing huge baskets on their heads,
+others drawing heavily laden barrows, driving donkey-carts, the piled-up
+fruit and vegetables making a blaze of colour. For three sous I recorded
+the purchase of more wild strawberries, peaches, and greengages than I
+knew what to do with, each grower doing business on his own account, no
+middleman to share his profits; choicest fruit and vegetables to be had
+almost for the asking. On this lovely Sunday evening plenty of peasant
+folk were about, the men fishing in the Loire, the women minding their
+children under the trees. But I noted here, as elsewhere, a gradual
+disappearance of the blue blouse and white coiffe. Broadcloth and
+bonnets are fast superseding the homely, picturesque dress of former
+days.
+
+The aerial residences just mentioned are characteristic of riverside
+Nevers. Craning our necks as we strolled to and fro, we remarked how
+much life in such altitudes must resemble that of a balloon, folks
+being thus lifted above the hubbub, malodours, and microbes of the human
+bee-hive below. For my own part I prefer a turnpike level, despite the
+engaging aspect of those rose-girt verandahs, bowers, and lawns on a
+level with the cathedral tower.
+
+"Nevers makes a fine appearance, rising proudly from the Loire," wrote
+Arthur Young, "but on the first entrance it is like a thousand other
+places."
+
+But the indefatigable apostle of the turnip had no time for archaeology
+on his great tour, or he would have discovered that Nevers possesses
+more than one architectural gem of the first water. The cathedral
+certainly, alike without and within, must take rank after those of
+Chartres, Le Mans, Reims, and how many others! but the exquisite little
+church of St. tienne and the Ducal Palace, are both perfect in their
+way, and will enchant all lovers of harmony and proportion. The first,
+another specimen of so-called Romanesque-Burgundian, has to be looked
+for, standing as it does in a kind of _cul de sac_; the second occupies
+a conspicuous site, forms, indeed, the centre-piece and crowning
+ornament of the town. Daintiest of the dainty, this fairy-like Italian
+palace in the heart of France, reminds us that once upon a time Nevers
+was the seat of Italian dukes, the last of whom was a nephew of Mazarin.
+The great Cardinal, "whose heart was more French than his speech," and
+who served France so well, despite his nationality and his nepotism,
+having purchased the Nivernais of a Gonzague, finally incorporated it
+into the French crown in 1659.
+
+To this day, Nevers remains true to its Italian traditions. Go into the
+tiniest suburban street, enter the poorest little general shop, and you
+are reminded of the art that made the city famous hundreds of years ago,
+an art introduced by a Duke of Mantua, relation of Catherine de Medicis.
+It was in the sixteenth century, that this feudal lord of the Nivernais
+summoned Italian potters hither, among these a native of Faenza.
+Under his direction a manufactory of faence was established, the ware
+resembling that of his native city, scriptural and allegorical subjects
+traced in manganese. The unrivalled blue glaze of Nevers is of later
+date. Just as Rouen potters were celebrated for their reds, the
+Nivernais surpassed them in blues. No French or foreign potters ever
+achieved an azure of equal depth and purity.
+
+The golden age of Nevers majolica belongs to that early period, but the
+highly ornamented faence now produced in its ateliers, shows taste and
+finish, and in the town itself may be found charming things as cheap as,
+if not cheaper than, our commonest earthenware.
+
+As I write, I have before me some purchases made at a small general
+dealer's, a plate, and two small amphora-shaped vases, costing a few
+sous each. The colouring of this cheap pottery is very harmonious, and
+the glaze remarkable for its brilliance. The shopwoman, with whom we
+had a pleasant chat, did not seem astonished at our admiration for her
+goods.
+
+"I sell lots of such things as you have just bought, to folks like
+you" _(de votre genre)_, she said, "strangers who like to carry away a
+souvenir of the place, and all my ware comes from the same manufacture."
+
+To-day Nevers thrives upon ornamental majolica. A hundred and ten years
+ago it throve upon plates and dishes commemorating the Revolution. In
+the upper storey of the Ducal Palace we may read revolutionary annals in
+faence, every event being memorialised by a piece of porcelain.
+
+Curious enough is this record in earthenware, one stormy day after
+another being thus commemorated; and perhaps more curious still is
+the evident care with which these fragile objects have been preserved.
+Throughout the Napoleonic era they might pass--had not gold pieces
+then on one side the portrait of "Napoleon Empereur," on the obverse
+"Rpublique Franais"?--but when Louis XVIII was brought back by his
+foreign friends, how was it that there came no general smashing, a great
+flinging of revolutionary potsherds to the dunghill? Safe enough now is
+the Nivernais collection, under the roof of the Ducal Palace, the
+rude designs and commonness of the ware strikingly contrasted with the
+exquisite things around.
+
+In close proximity to these cheap plates, dedicated to the Phrygian cap
+and sans-culottism, are the very choicest specimens of Nevers faence of
+priceless value. Why the municipality, as a rule so generous towards the
+public, should thus inconveniently house its treasure, is inconceivable.
+
+The museum is reached by a long spiral staircase, without banister or
+support, and a false step must certainly result in a broken leg, or,
+perhaps, neck! The room also contains a striking portrait of Theodore de
+Bze, the great French reformer, who, then an aged man, penned a letter,
+sublime in its force and simplicity, to Henry IV., conjuring him not
+to abandon the Protestant faith. The mention of this fact recalls an
+interesting experience. I here allude to the incontestable advance
+of Protestantism in France. The traveller whose acquaintance with the
+country began a quarter of a century ago, cannot fail to be impressed
+with this fact. Alike in towns large and small, new places of worship
+have sprung up, Nevers now possessing an Evangelical church. And good
+was it to hear the appreciation of the little Protestant community from
+my Catholic landlady.
+
+"Yes," she said, "the Protestants here are worthy of all respect
+(_dignes gens_) and the pastor also; I esteem him much." Evidently the
+Lemaitre-Coppe-Droulde dictum, "Only the Catholic can be called a
+Frenchman," is not accepted at Nevers.
+
+In dazzlingly brilliant weather, and amid glowing scenery, we continued
+our journey to Moulins, as we travelled by rail, and not by road unable
+to identify "the little opening in the road leading to a thicket" where
+Sterne discovered Maria. Has anyone ever identified the spot I wonder,
+poplar, small brook and the rest?
+
+Too soon were we also for "the heyday of the vintage, when Nature is
+pouring her abundance into everyone's lap." For the vintage, indeed,
+one must go farther. Sterne must have been thinking of Burgundy when he
+penned that line, or the phylloxera has brought about a transformation,
+vineyards here being changed into pastures. The scenery of the Allier,
+like that around Autun, recalls many parts of England. Meadows set
+around with hedges; little rises of green hill here and there; cattle
+browsing by quiet streams; just such pictures as we may see in our own
+Midlands. I well remember a remark of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton
+on this subject. We were strolling near his home, in the neighbourhood
+of Autun, one day, when he pointed to the landscape over against us.
+
+"How like that is to many an English scene," he said; "and maybe it was
+the English aspect of this region that tempted me to settle here." I had
+paid Moulins a hasty visit many years before, but, unlike Nevers and so
+many French towns, the _chef-lieu_ of the Allier does not improve upon
+further acquaintance. And I surmise, that such is the impression of my
+country people generally. English travellers must be few and far between
+at Moulins, or why should the appearance of two English ladies attract
+so much curiosity? Wherever we went, the good folks of Moulins, alike
+rich and poor, turned round to have a good look at us, even stopping
+short to stare. All this was done without any rudeness or remark, but
+such extraordinary behaviour can only be accounted for by the foregoing
+supposition. For some reason or other our compatriots do not, like
+Sterne and Maria go to Moulins.
+
+Why should an essentially aristocratic place be so ill-kept, not to say
+dirty? The town is no centre of industry. Tall factory chimneys do
+not disfigure its silhouette or blacken its walls. Handsome equipages
+enliven the streets. But the municipality, like certain saints of
+old, seem to have taken vows of perpetual uncleanliness. Alike the
+scavenger's broom and the dust-cart appear to be unknown.
+
+Whilst a riverside walk at Nevers presents nothing but cheerful bustle
+and an aspect of prosperity, here you approach the Allier through scenes
+of squalor and torpid neglect. The poorer inhabitants, too, are very
+un-French in appearance, wanting that personal tidiness characteristic
+of their country people in general. An aristocratic place, means an
+Ultramontane place, and every third man you meet in Moulins wears a
+soutane. What so many curs, Jesuits and Christian Brothers can find to
+do passes the ordinary comprehension.
+
+However interesting twins may be in the human family, monumental duality
+is far from successful. Unfortunately for this delightfully picturesque
+old town, its graceful Cathedral has, in the grand new church of
+Sacre-Coeur, a double. But--
+
+ "As moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine,"
+
+is the second self, the never to be obliterated shadow of the first and
+far more beautiful church.
+
+Two towers of equal height, twice two spires like as cherries and
+in close juxtaposition rise above the town, an ensemble spoiling the
+symmetry of outline and general effect.
+
+How much better off was Moulins when, instead of four spires, she
+gloried in two? Then, of a verity, the city would have presented as
+noble a view as those of La Charit and Nevers from the Loire.
+
+The ancient chteau now used as a prison and the Jacquemart or clock
+tower are rare old bits of architecture, of themselves worth the journey
+to Moulins. Jacquemart, it may be here explained, is a corruption of
+Jacques Marques, the name of a famous Flemish clockmaker who lived in
+the fourteenth century. Amongst other achievements of this artist is
+the clock of Ntre Dame, Dijon, as curious in its way as the still
+more celebrated cock-crowing time-piece of Strasburg, and declared
+by Froissart to be the wonder of Christendom. World-wide became the
+reputation of Jacques Marques, and thus it came about that clock towers
+generally were called after his masterpieces.
+
+On my former hurried visit to Moulins, as was the case with my
+predecessor, Arthur Young over a hundred years before, "other
+occupations" had "driven even Maria and the poplar from my head, and
+left me no room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci." In other words, I had
+visited Rome without seeing the Pope.
+
+On this second, and more leisurely visit, I had ample opportunity of
+making up for the omission. Truly, the tomb of the last Montmorency
+deserves a deliberate examination. It is one of the most sumptuous
+monuments in the world and as a testimony of wifely devotion worthy to
+be ranked with that of the Carian Queen to her lord, the Mausolus, whose
+name is perpetuated in the word mausoleum.
+
+French history cannot be at everyone's fingers' ends, so a word here
+about the last of the Montmorencys, victim not so much of Richelieu's
+policy as of a kinsman's meanness.
+
+When the dashing, devil-me-care, hitherto fortunate Henri de
+Montmorency, Marshal of France and Governor of Languedoc, plotted
+against Richelieu or rather against the Royal supremacy, it was mainly
+at the instigation of Gaston of Orleans. No more abject figure in French
+annals than this unworthy son of the great Gascon, Henri IV., thus
+portrayed by one whose tongue was as sharp as his sword: "Gaston of
+Orleans," wrote Richelieu, "engaged in every enterprise because he had
+not the will to resist persuasion, dishonourably drawing back from want
+of courage to support his associates."
+
+In the conspiracy of Montmorency, Gaston had played the part of
+instigator, leaving the other to his fate as soon as the situation
+became perilous. Every effort was made to save the duke, but in vain,
+and at the age of thirty-seven he ended a brilliant, adventuresome life
+on the scaffold at Toulouse.
+
+One thought was uppermost in my mind when, a few years ago, I visited
+that city, the only French city that welcomed the Inquisition. As I
+stood in the elegant Capitol, musing on Montmorency's story, it occurred
+to me how few of us realise what a respecter of persons was French law
+under the ancien rgime. Hard as seems the fate of this dashing young
+duke, we must remember what would have been his punishment, but for
+his titles of nobility. Death swift and sudden, in other words, by
+decapitation, was the choicest prerogative of the nobility; tortures
+before and after condemnation, breaking on the wheel, burning alive, and
+other hideous ends, being the lot of the people.
+
+This monument, so noteworthy alike from a historic and artistic point of
+view, was saved from destruction by ready wit. When, in the ferment of
+revolution, the iconoclastic spirit had got the upper hand, a citizen of
+Moulins met a mob, bent on destroying what they supposed to be the
+tomb of some hated grand seigneur, oppressor of the poor. Following the
+rabble to the convent, no sooner did he see the mallet and hammer raised
+than this worthy bourgeois, who himself deserves a monument, shouted,
+"Hands off, citizens! Yonder reposes no aristocrat, but as good a
+citizen as any man-jack of you, aye, who had the honour of losing his
+head for having conspired against a King."
+
+The crowd melted away without a word, the monument remains intact, and
+generations have had bequeathed to them an example of what presence of
+mind may effect, not with nerve, sinew, or bodily prowess, but with
+the tongue. The Convent of the Visitation, to which Montmorency's widow
+retired, and in the chapel of which she raised this memorial, is now
+converted into a Lyce. It is a handsome building and was built by
+Madame de Chantal, foundress of the Order of Visitadines, or nuns whose
+office it was to visit the sick. This pious lady, the friend of St.
+Franois de Sales, and herself canonised by Pope Benot XIV., was the
+bosom friend of Felicia Orsini, Montmorency's wife, who succeeded her as
+Superior of the convent on her death.
+
+But even an abbess, who had taken the veil, could not refuse visits,
+some of which must have been as a second entering of iron into this
+proud woman's soul. The coward Gaston, when passing through Moulins,
+sought an interview. Richelieu, also, whose emissary received the
+following message: "Tell your master, that my tears reply for me and
+that I am his humble servant." Years after, Louis XIV. visited the once
+beautiful and high-spirited Italian, now an aged abbess occupying a
+bare cell and from his lips, despot and voluptuary though he was, might
+always be expected the right word in the right place. "Madame," he said,
+on taking leave, "we may learn something here. I need not ask you to
+pray for the King."
+
+[Illustration: TOMB OF MONTMORENCY, MOULINS.]
+
+But interest in personalities is leading me from what I have set myself
+to describe, namely, portraiture in marble. For this magnificent work
+thus perpetuates the last of the Montmorencys and his wife as they were
+when separated for ever in their prime. Imposing although the monument
+is as a whole, these two figures in white marble, standing out against
+a dark background, engross attention. The entire work covers the wall
+behind the high altar, the sculptures being in pure white marble, the
+framework in black. Dismissing the niched Mars and Hercules on the one
+side, the allegorised Religion and Charity on the other, we study the
+central figures both offering interest of quite different kind.
+
+Why a dashing soldier and courtier of the Renaissance should
+be represented in the guise of a Roman warrior, is an anomaly,
+irreconcilable as that of pagan gods and the personification of
+Christian attributes here placed vis--vis. Perhaps the grief-stricken
+wife, who was, as it appears, of a highly romantic and adventuresome
+turn, wished thus to commemorate the heroic qualities of her husband;
+she might also have wished to dissociate him altogether from his own
+time, a period of which, in her eyes, he would be the victim. Be this
+as it may, the Roman undress and accoutrements do not harmonise with a
+physiognomy essentially French and French of a given epoch. Whilst the
+interest aroused by the Duchess's effigy is purely artistic, that of her
+husband excites curiosity rather than admiration. The head is
+strangely poised, much as if the artist intended to suggest the fact
+of decapitation; obliquity of vision, a defect hereditary in the
+Montmorencys, is also indicated, adding singularity. The half-recumbent
+figure by the Duke's side, is of rare pathos and beauty. Almost angelic
+in its resignation and religious fervour is the upturned face. The
+drapery, too, shows classic grace and simplicity, as strongly contrasted
+with the martial travesty opposite as are the two countenances in
+expression.
+
+Long will art-lovers linger before this monument raised by wifely
+devotion, a monument, with so many another, perpetuating rather the
+devotion of the survivor than claims on posterity of the dead. And let
+not hasty travellers follow Arthur Young's example, jotting down, after
+a visit to Moulins, "No room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+SOUVIGNY AND SENS.
+
+A quarter of an hour by rail, an hour and a quarter by road, from
+Moulins lies Souvigny, the cradle of the Bourbons, and as interesting
+and delightful a little excursion as travellers can desire. On a glowing
+September morning the scenery of the Allier looked its very best. Never
+as long as I live shall I forget the beauty of that drive. Lightest,
+loveliest cumuli floated athwart a pure, not too dazzlingly blue sky,
+before us stretched avenue after avenue of poplar or plane trees,
+veritable aisles of green letting in the azure, reminding me of the
+famous Hobbema in our National Gallery. At many points the landscape
+recalled our native land; but for the white oxen of the Morvan, we
+might have fancied ourselves in Sussex or the Midlands. And cloudage,
+to borrow an expression of Coleridge, suggested England, too. Clouds and
+skies of the Midlands, none more poetic or pictorial throughout England
+seemed here--those skies above the vast sweeps of undulating chalk
+having a peculiar depth and tenderness, the clouds a marvellous
+brilliance, transparence, and variety of form! So beautiful are those
+cloud-pictures that we hardly needed beauty below. Here on the road to
+Moulins we had both, the landscape, if not romantic or striking, being
+rich in pastoral charm. Arthur Young, who looked at every bit of country
+first and foremost from the farmer's point of view, was so much struck
+with the neighbourhood of Moulins that, but for the Revolution, he would
+very probably have become a French landowner. Just eight miles from the
+city he visited in August, 1789, an estate was offered for sale by its
+possessor, the Marquis de Goutte. "The finest climate in France, perhaps
+in Europe," he wrote, "a beautiful and healthy country, excellent roads,
+and navigation to Paris; wine, game, fish, and everything appears on the
+table except the produce of the tropics; a good house, a fine garden,
+with ready markets for every kind of produce; and, above all the rest,
+three thousand acres of enclosed land, capable in a very little time of
+being, without expense, quadrupled in its produce--altogether formed a
+picture sufficient to tempt a man who had been twenty-five years in the
+constant practice of husbandry adapted to the soil." The price of the
+whole was only thirteen thousand and odd pounds, and the seller took
+care to explain that "all seigneurial rights _haute justice_" (that is
+to say, the privilege of hanging poachers, and others, at the chteau
+gates), were included in the purchase money. But the country was already
+in a ferment, and had our countryman struck a bargain then and there,
+the last-named extras would have proved a dead letter. Seigneurial
+rights were being abolished, or rather surrendered, at the very time
+that this transaction was under consideration. As Arthur Young tells
+us, he might as well have asked for an elephant at Moulins as for a
+newspaper. No one knew, or apparently cared to know, what was taking
+place in Paris. On asking his landlady for a newspaper, she replied she
+had none, they were too dear. Whereupon the irate traveller wrote down
+in his diary: "it is a great pity that there is not a camp of _brigands_
+in your coffee room, Madame Bourgeau."
+
+This part of France is not a region of prosperous peasant farmers, nor
+is it a chess-board of tiny crops, the four or five acre freeholds of
+small owners cut up into miniature fields. I had a long talk with a
+countryman, and he informed me that, as in Arthur Young's time, the land
+belongs to large owners, and is still, as in his time, cultivated by
+_mtayers_ on the half-profit system. At the present day, however,
+another class has sprung up, that of tenant farmers on a considerable
+scale; these, in their turn, sublet to peasants who give their labour
+and with whom they divide the profits. Now, the half-profit system does
+certainly answer elsewhere; in the Indre, for example, it has proved a
+stepping-stone to the position of small capitalist. Here I learned, with
+regret, that such is not the case. Land, even in the highly-favoured
+Allier, cannot afford a triple revenue. In the Indre, on the contrary,
+there is no intermediary between land-owners and _mtayers_, the former
+even selling small holdings to their labourers as soon as they have
+saved a little capital.
+
+"No; folks are not prosperous hereabouts," said my informant. "There are
+no manufacturers at Moulins to enrich the people, and, what with high
+rents and low prices, the half-profit system does not pay. If money is
+made, it is by the tenant-farmer, not by the _mtayer_." Curious and
+instructive is the fact that the most Catholic and aristocratic centres
+in France should often be the poorest; Moulins and the Allier afford but
+one example out of many.
+
+A beautiful drive of an hour and a quarter brought us within sight of
+Souvigny. Towering above the bright landscape rose the Abbey Church,
+its sober dun, red and brown hues, the quaint houses of similar colour
+huddled around it, contrasted with the dazzling brightness of sky and
+verdure.
+
+Still more striking the contrast between the pile so majestic and
+surroundings so homely! Here, as at La Charit, nothing is in keeping
+with the mass of architecture, which, in its apogee, stood for the town
+itself, what of town, indeed, there was being the merest accessory,
+inevitable but unimposing entourage, growing up bit by bit. The present
+population of Souvigny is something over three thousand, doubtless, as
+in the case of La Charit, less than that of its former monastery and
+dependencies. As we wind upwards, thus flanking the town and abbey,
+we realise the superb position of this cradle and mausoleum of the
+Bourbons. For Souvigny was both. Two thousand and odd years ago, here,
+in the very heart of France, Adhmar, a brave soldier, nothing more,
+became the first "Sire de Bourbon," Charles le Simple having given
+him the fief of Bourbon as a reward for military services, its chief
+establishing himself at Souvigny, and of course founding a religious
+house. The Benedictine abbey, being enriched with the bones of two
+saints, former Abbots of Cluny, became a famous pilgrimage. Adhmar's
+successors transferred their seat of seigneurial government to
+Bourbon l'Archimbault, but for centuries here they found their last
+resting-place, and here they are commemorated in marble.
+
+Indescribably picturesque is this whilom capital of the tiny feudal
+kingdom; topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, coated of many colours are its
+zig-zag little streets, one house tumbling on the back of its neighbour,
+another having contrived to wedge itself between two of portlier bulk,
+a third coolly taking possession of some inviting frontage, shutting out
+its fellow's light, air, and sunshine; here, meeting the eye, breakneck
+alley, there aerial terrace, and on all sides architectural reminders of
+the Souvigny passed away, the Souvigny once so splendid and important,
+now reduced to nothingness, as is, politically speaking, the so-called
+House of France.
+
+The Abbey Church, like that of La Charit, shows a mixture of many
+styles, the general effect being magnificent in the extreme. Throughout
+eastern France you find no more imposing faade. But, as observes M.
+Emile Montgut, in the work before quoted, the church has been created
+as Nature creates a soil, each age contributing its layer; Byzantine,
+Roman, Gothic, each style is here seen, the latter in its purity.
+
+Whilst the church itself stands taut and trim, a mass of sculptured
+masonry in rich browns and reds, the interior shows melancholy
+dilapidation. But, indeed, for the stern lessons of history, how sad
+were the spectacle of these mutilated effigies in marble, exquisite
+sculptures when fresh from the artist's hand, to-day torsos so hideously
+hacked and hewn as hardly to look human! We cannot, however, forget that
+the history of races, as of nations and individuals, is retributive.
+When the 'Roi-Soleil,' that incarnation of the Bourbon spirit, was
+so inflated with his own personality as to forbid the erection of
+any statue throughout France but his own, he paved the way for the
+revolutionary iconoclasts of a century later. It was simply a recurrence
+of the old fatality, the inevitable moral, since History began.
+
+For here, defaced to such a point that sculptures they can be called
+no longer, are memorialised not only Louis XIV.'s ancestors, but his
+offspring, namely, Louise Marie, one of his seven children by Madame
+de Montespan, all, as we know, with those of Madame de la Vallire,
+legitimised, ennobled and enriched. Pierre de Beaujeu, husband of the
+great Anne of France, was also buried here. Anne it was who, on the
+death of Louis XI., governed France with all her father's astuteness,
+but without his cruelty, and pleasant and comforting it is to find that
+Duke Pierre, her husband, seconded her in every way, himself remaining
+in the background, acting to perfection the difficult rle of Prince
+Consort. The sight of these once exquisite marbles may perhaps awaken
+in other minds the reflection that crossed my own. Heretical as I shall
+seem, I venture to express the opinion, that in such cases one of two
+courses are advisable, either the removal of the torsos, or restoration;
+why should not some genius be able in this field to do what Viollet
+le Duc has so successfully achieved in another? But for that great
+architect, the cathedral of Moulins--and how many other beautiful French
+churches?--would long ago have tumbled to pieces, been handed over as
+storage to corn merchants, or brewers! Is it so much more difficult to
+restore a marble effigy, whether of human being or animal, than a faade
+or an altar-piece? If impossible, then, I say, let broken marbles like
+those of Souvigny be hidden from view.
+
+The agreeable town of Sens on the Yonne is here described for
+completeness' sake. Although not lying in the Bourbonnais, Sens formed
+the last stage of our little tour in this direction, a direct line of
+railway connecting the town with Moulins. What a change we found here!
+Instead of unswept, malodorous streets, and sordid riverside quarters,
+all was clean, trim, and cared for, one wholly uncommon feature lending
+especial charm.
+
+For the tutelar goddess of Sens, benignant genius presiding over the
+city, is a stream, or rather parent of many streams, that water the
+streets of their own free will, supplying thirsty beasts with copious
+draughts in torrid weather, and keeping up a perpetual air of rusticity
+and coolness.
+
+Wherever you go you are followed by the musical ripple of these
+runlets, purling brooks so crystalline that you are tempted to look for
+forget-me-nots.
+
+The voluntariness of this street watering constitutes its witchery. Post
+haste flows each tiny course; not having a moment to spare seems every
+current. Need we wonder at the fabled Arethusas and Sabrinas of more
+youthful worlds?
+
+Of itself Sens is very engaging. We can easily understand the fact of
+the late Mr. Hamerton having made his first French home here. In the
+memoir of her husband, affixed to his autobiography, Mrs. Hamerton gives
+us particulars, not only of individual, but of super-personal interest.
+I use the last expression because the idiosyncrasy described is common
+to most men and women of genius or exceptional talent. The charming
+essayist then, the art-critic, gifted with so much insight and
+feeling settled down at Sens we are told, for the purpose of painting
+'commission pictures.' His career was to be decided by the brush and not
+by the pen. The author of "The Intellectual Life," with how many other
+works of distinction, had, at the outset, wholly mistaken his vocation.
+"The first thing considered by Gilbert when he settled at Sens," writes
+Mrs. Hamerton, "was the choice of subjects for his commission pictures,
+which he intended to paint directly from nature; and he soon selected
+panoramic views from the top of a vine-clad hill, called Saint Bon,
+which commands an extensive view of the river Yonne, and of the plains
+about it." Unfortunately, rather we should say fortunately, anyhow,
+for the reading world, the 'commission pictures' were declined. The
+disappointed artist, out of humour with Sens, made a series of journeys
+in search of an ideal home, the result being that most entertaining and
+successful book, "Round My House," and the final devotion of its author
+to letters.
+
+Sens might well seem an ideal place of abode to many. Formed from the
+ancient Province of Burgundy, the Department of the Yonne has the charm
+of Burgundian scenery, with the addition of a wide, lovely river.
+All travellers on the Lyons-Marseilles Railway will recall the noble
+appearance of the town from the railway--the Cathedral, with its one
+lofty tower, rising above grey roofs, no factory chimneys marring the
+outline, and, between bright stretches of country, the Yonne, not least
+enchanting of French rivers, if not the most striking or romantic,
+perhaps the sweetest and most soothing in the world. The favourable
+impression of Sens gained by this fleeting view, is more than justified
+on nearer acquaintance. The Cathedral, externally less imposing than
+those of Bourges, Rheims, or even Rodez and Beauvais, is of a piece
+alike without and within, no tasteless excrescence disfiguring its
+outer walls, little or no modern tawdriness to be seen inside, an
+architectural gem of great purity. For the curious in such matters, the
+sacristy offers many wonders, among others a large fragment of the
+true cross, presented to Sens by Charlemagne. Less apocryphal are the
+vestments of our own Archbishop Thomas, alb, girdle, stole, and the
+rest, all most carefully preserved and exhibited in a glass case. It
+will be remembered that, when the turbulent Thomas of London, afterwards
+known as Becket, was condemned as a traitor, he fled to France. "This is
+a fearful day," said one of his attendants on hearing the sentence. "The
+Day of Judgment will be more fearful," replied Thomas. It was not at
+Sens, however, that the refugee took up his abode, but in the Abbey of
+St. Colombe, now in ruins hard by.
+
+On the other side of the bridge, crowning an islet, stands one of those
+curious church_lets_, or churc_lings_ I was about to say, that possess
+so powerful a fascination for the archaeological mind. Particularly
+striking was the little Romanesque interior in the September twilight,
+a picturesque group of Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul, rehearsing
+canticles with their pupils at one end, the subdued light just enabling
+us to realise the harmony of proportions. This little church of
+St. Maurice dating from the twelfth century, partly restored in the
+sixteenth, must not on any account be missed. Its pretty spire crowns
+the Isle d'Yonne, or island of the Yonne.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.
+
+Late and tired, I arrived, one September evening, at Arcis-sur-Aube,
+birthplace and home of the great Danton.
+
+I had brought with me letters of introduction to friends' friends,
+unaware that at such a moment the sign-manual of the President of the
+Republic himself would hardly have secured me a night's lodging. For
+at this especial moment the little town, from end to end, was in the
+possession of the military headquarters of that year's manoeuvres.
+
+Every private dwelling showed a notice of the officers in command
+sheltered under its roof. Here and there, the presence of sentinels
+indicated the location of generals. The hotels were crowded from
+basement to attic, folks who let lodgings for hire had made bargains
+long before, whilst the very poorest made up beds, or turned out of
+their own, to accommodate the rank and file. At the extreme end of the
+town, close to the ancestral home of the Dantons, stands the straggling
+old-fashioned Htel de la Poste, a hostelry, I should suppose, not in
+the least changed since the days of the great conventionnel. All here
+was bustle and excitement. Mine host was spitting game in the kitchen,
+and could hardly find time to answer my application; soldiers and
+officers' servants, scullions and men of all-work, almost knocked
+each other down in the inn-yard, the landlady, generally so affable a
+personage in provincial France, gave me the cold shoulder. I turned out
+in the forlorn hope of finding a good Samaritan. Of course, to present
+a letter of introduction under such circumstances, was quite out of the
+question, my errand would have been the last hair to break the camel's
+back, final embarrassment of an already overdone hostess. But night was
+at hand; the last train to Troyes, the nearest town, had gone, no other
+would pass through Arcis-sur-Aube until the small hours of the morning.
+Unless I could procure a room, therefore, I should be in the position of
+a homeless vagrant. Well, not to be dismayed, I set out making inquiries
+right and left, to my astonishment being rebuffed rather surlily and
+with looks of suspicion. The fact is, during these manoeuvres, a
+lady arriving at head-quarters alone is apt to be looked upon with no
+favourable eye. Especially do people wonder what on earth can bring a
+foreigner to an out of the way country place at such a time--she must
+surely be a spy, pickpocket or something worse!
+
+After having vainly made inquiries to no purpose along the principal
+street, I turned into a grocer's shop in a smaller thoroughfare; two
+young assistants were chatting without anything to do, and they looked
+so good-natured that I entered and begged them to help me.
+
+Very likely an English hobbledehoy similarly appealed to would have
+blushed, giggled, and got rid of the stranger as quickly as possible;
+French youths of all ranks have rather more of the man of the world in
+them. The elder of the lads became at once interested in my case, and
+manifested a keen desire to be serviceable. Hailing a little girl from
+without, he bade her conduct me to a certain Mademoiselle D---- who let
+rooms and might have one vacant. The little maid, fetching a companion
+to accompany us--here also was a French trait; whatever is done, must be
+done sociably--took me to the address given; the demoiselle in question
+was, however, not at home, but the concierge said that, another
+demoiselle living near would probably be able to accommodate me, which
+she did. Before I proceed with my narrative, however, I must mention the
+ill fortune that befell my useful little cicerone.
+
+On taking leave I had given her half a franc, a modest recompense enough
+as I thought. The following story would seem to show that the good
+people of Arcis have not yet become imbued with modern ideas about
+money, also that they have a high notion of the value of truth. To my
+dismay I learnt next morning that the poor little girl had been soundly
+slapped, her mother refusing to believe that she had come honestly by so
+much money; as my hostess observed, the good woman might at least have
+waited for corroboration of the child's statement. A box of chocolate,
+transmitted by a third hand, I have no doubt acted as a consolation.
+
+Dear kind mademoiselle Jenny M---- How warmly she welcomed me to her
+homely hearth! My little purple rosette, insignia of an officer of
+Public Instruction of France, proved a bond of union. This excellent
+woman was the daughter of a schoolmaster who had himself worn the
+academic ribbon, a French schoolmaster's crowning ambition. He had left
+his daughter, in comfortable circumstances, that is to say, she enjoyed
+an annuity of 40 a year, the possession of a large, roomy house, part
+of which she let, and half an acre of garden full as it could be of
+flowers, fruit and vegetables. We at once became excellent friends.
+
+"Now," she said, "I am very sorry that my best bedroom is given up
+to soldiers, two poor young fellows I took in the other night out of
+compassion. You can, however, have the little back room looking on
+to the garden, it is rather in disorder, but you will find the bed
+comfortable. I cannot offer to do much for you in the way of waiting,
+having a lame foot, but a woman brings me milk early in the morning and
+she shall put a cupful outside your door; bread and butter you will find
+in the little kitchen next to your room."
+
+I assured her that such an arrangement would suit me very well, as I
+had my own spirit lamp and could make tea for myself; then we went
+downstairs. The great difficulty that night was to get anything to eat.
+The soldiers had eaten every body out of house and home, she assured me
+there was not such a thing as a chop or an egg to be had in the town for
+love or money. Fortunately, I had the remains of a cold chicken in my
+lunch basket, and this did duty for supper, my hostess pressing upon me
+some excellent Bordeaux.
+
+As we chatted, she mentioned the fact that two or three friends, much
+in the same situation as herself, occupied the little houses running
+alongside her garden.
+
+"We are all old maids," she informed me.
+
+"Old maids," quoth I, "how is that? I thought there were no single women
+out of convents in France."
+
+"The thing," she said, "has come about in this way--we have all enough
+to live upon, and so many women worsen their condition by marriage,
+instead of bettering it, that we made up our minds to live comfortably
+on what we have got, and not trouble our heads about the men. We
+live very happily together, and are all socialists, radicals, _libres
+penseuses_ and the rest. We read a great deal, and, as you will see
+to-morrow, my father left me a good library."
+
+As we sat at table in the somewhat untidy kitchen, my fellow guests, the
+conscripts, came in, they were pleasant, civil young fellows belonging
+to different classes of life. One was a middle-class civilian from an
+industrial city of the north, the other a homely peasant, son of the
+soil.
+
+These conscripts, however poorly fed in barracks, fare like aldermen
+during these manoeuvres, everybody giving them to eat and drink of their
+best. They had just dined plentifully, but for all that, managed to get
+down a bumper of wine immediately offered by Mademoiselle Jenny; a hunk
+of Dijon gingerbread they did evidently find some difficulty in getting
+through. We toasted each other in friendliest fashion, and the civilian,
+out of compliment to myself, drank to the health of the English army.
+
+Next morning I fared no less sumptuously than a soldier during the
+manoeuvres. A savoury steam had announced game for our mid-day meal.
+
+"Now," said my hostess, as she dished up and began to carve a fat
+partridge cooked to a turn--"this bird that came so propos, is a
+present from a great-nephew of Danton. He is the _juge de paix_ here and
+a good neighbour of mine. We will pay him a visit this afternoon."
+
+Of this gentleman, of Danton's home and family, I shall say something
+later on. We made a round of visits that day, but the _juge de paix_,
+who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country
+in search of more partridges. Other friends and acquaintances we found
+at home; among these was a retired confectioner, who had once kept a
+shop in Regent Street, and had told Mademoiselle Jenny that she would be
+delighted to talk English with me.
+
+Warmly welcomed I was by the portly, prosperous looking pastry-cook,
+who was reading a newspaper and smoking a cigarette in a well-furnished,
+comfortable parlour. But alas! thirty years had elapsed since his
+departure from England, and during the interval he had never once
+interchanged a word with any of my country-people. To his intense
+mortification, he had completely lost hold of the English tongue!
+Another acquaintance, an elderly woman, who seemed to be living on small
+independent means, had a curious house pet. This, once a pretty little
+frisking lamb, had now reached the proportions of a big fat sheep. So
+docile and affectionate, however, was the animal, and so attached had
+the good soul become to it, that a pet it seemed likely to remain to the
+end of its days; the creature followed its mistress about like a dog.
+
+The little town of Arcis-sur-Aube, like many another, is now deserted by
+all who can get to livelier and more bustling centres. Tanneries, vest,
+stocking and glove weaving and stitching, are the only resources of the
+place.
+
+During my stay, I made the acquaintance of a charming family engaged in
+the latter trade. Stopping one day in front of a weaver's open door to
+watch him at work, I was cordially invited to enter. The head of the
+house, one of those quiet, intelligent, dignified artisans so typical of
+his class in France, was weaving vest sleeves at a hand loom, just as
+I had seen, at St. tienne, ribbon weavers pursuing their avocations at
+home. As we chatted about his handicraft and its modest emoluments,
+his little son came in from school, a bright lad who, to his father's
+delight, had lately gained prizes. It is curious that only one part of
+a vest, stocking or glove is done by a single hand; some goods I found
+came to this house to be finished and others were sent away to be
+made ready for sale elsewhere. By-and-by, a pretty, refined girl, the
+daughter of the house, came in and asked me if I would like to see what
+she was doing.
+
+Forthwith she took me to a neat, cheerful little room upstairs
+overlooking a garden.
+
+On a table by the open window was a hand-sewing machine, and her
+occupation was the ornamental stitching of silk and cotton gloves by
+machinery. The pay seemed excessively low I thought, I believe something
+like twopence per dozen pair, but the young machinist seemed perfectly
+contented and happy.
+
+"It is pleasant," she said, "to be able to earn something at home and to
+live with papa and mamma and my little brother."
+
+Before leaving, with the prettiest grace in the world, she begged my
+acceptance of a dainty pair of lavender silk gloves knitted by her own
+hands.
+
+Some day I hope to revisit Arcis-sur-Aube, and meantime I hold
+occasional intercourse by post with my friends in Danton's town.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--(_continued_).
+
+But by far the most interesting acquaintance at this most historic
+little town was the great-nephew of Danton. Middle-aged, unpretentious
+of aspect, yet with that unmistakable look partly of dignified
+self-possession, partly of authority, seldom absent from the French
+official, I looked in vain for any likeness to the portraits of his
+great kinsman. Yet perhaps in the stalwart figure, manly proportions and
+bronzed complexion, might be traced some suggestion of the athlete, the
+strong swimmer, the bold sportsman, whose mighty voice once made Europe
+tremble. The brother of this gentleman also lived at Arcis-sur-Aube, but
+was absent during my visit. The _juge de paix_ and his family were on
+friendliest terms with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a
+chat.
+
+From him and other residents I gathered some interesting particulars
+about the Danton family. The great tribune left two little sons, George
+and Antoine, who grew up and resided in their ancestral home, hiding
+themselves from the world. Their young step-mother it was whose memory,
+when on the way to the guillotine, evoked from Danton the only betrayal
+of personal emotion throughout his stormy career: "Must I leave thee for
+ever, my beloved," then, quickly recovering himself, cried "Danton, no
+weakness!"
+
+Madame Danton married again and is lost sight of. One of Danton's
+sisters entered a convent, as it was supposed hoping to expiate by a
+life given up to prayer the crimes, as she deemed them, of her brother.
+Meantime, appalled by the shadow of their father's memory, George and
+Antoine decided to remain celibate, a pair marked out for solitude and
+obloquy.
+
+"Let the name of Danton perish from the recollection of man," they said.
+
+The elder, however, afterwards acknowledged and, I believe, legitimised
+a daughter according to the merciful French law. Mademoiselle Danton
+became Madame Menuel, and, strange as it may seem, at the time of my
+visit, this direct descendant of Danton was still living. President
+Carnot had given her a small pension in the form of a _bureau de tabac_
+at Troyes, where she died in 1896, leaving a son, who some years ago was
+divorced from his wife, emigrated to Buenos Ayres, and has never been
+heard of since. It is supposed that he is dead. The two great-nephews
+have each a son and a daughter living.
+
+The _juge de paix_ and his brother are now among the most respected
+citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their
+great ancestor. Neither of the pair inhabit the house in which Danton
+was born, and to which he ever returned with joy and satisfaction.
+
+A sight of Danton's house is sufficient to disprove the calumnies of
+that noble woman, but inveterate hater, Madame Roland.
+
+From her memoirs we might gather that Danton was a poverty-stricken,
+pettifogging lawyer of the basest class. That Danton's family belong to
+the well-to-do upper middle ranks, we see from the object lesson before
+us. At the time of my visit, this large, roomy, well-built house, with
+coach-house, stables and half-a-dozen acres of garden, orchard and wood,
+was to let for 700 francs a year. But so low a rent now-a-days is no
+indication of its value a hundred years ago.
+
+[Illustration: DANTON'S HOME AT ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.]
+
+The owner of the house most kindly showed me over every part.
+
+It is two-storeyed, plainly but solidly constructed, and evidently
+arranged, according to French fashion, for a combined tenancy. Two or
+three families could here well be accommodated under the same roof, each
+having separate establishments. I found myself in a covered carriageway,
+cool dark corridors leading to outhouses and stables, a wide staircase
+with handsome oak balustrade to upstair kitchen and bed-chambers, on
+either side of the ground floor were spacious salon and dining room,
+fronting town and river, water-mills and quays. In the vast kitchen was
+an enormous chopping block, suggestive of large family joints.
+
+My kind cicerone allowed me to linger in Danton's bed-chamber. I now
+looked out from the window at which the fallen leader was often seen
+by his townsfolk during the last days of his stormy career. In his
+night-cap the colossal figure might be descried gazing out into the
+night, as if peering into futurity, trying to read the future. Did he
+perhaps from time to time waver in his decision to abide his doom?
+We know that again and again his friends urged him to seek safety in
+flight.
+
+"Does a man carry his country on the sole of his shoe?" he retorted
+fiercely, but it may well be that he here envied weaker men. Danton's
+character was thoroughly French. His ambition was as he said to retire
+to Arcis-sur-Aube and there plant cabbages. A devoted son, husband and
+father, his affections were also centred upon others not of his blood
+and name. He tenderly loved his old nurse, and left her a small pension.
+Within the last thirty years, thanks to M. Aulard and his collaborators,
+the history of the Revolution has been written anew, or rather for the
+first time. The gigantic figure of Danton stands forth to-day in its
+true light, as the saviour of France from the fate of Poland, and as a
+founder of the democratic idea. He succumbed less because he was a rival
+of Robespierre than because he was a friend of humanity.
+
+"I would rather be guillotined than guillotine," he repeated, and it was
+mainly his effort to stay the Terror that made him its victim.
+
+The study adjoining contained that suggestive library of English,
+Spanish, Italian, and ancient classics of which his biographers have
+given us a catalogue, but which are now, alas! dispersed for ever.
+
+The house stands conspicuous, rearing a proud front to the world, if
+world could be used appropriately of so quiet, humdrum a little place.
+A few hundred yards off we reach the Church, Htel de Ville and open
+square. In 1886, a monument to Danton was inaugurated here with much
+ceremony. A bronze statue represents the great tribune in the fiery
+attitude of an orator, pronouncing his immortal phrase:--
+
+_"De l'audace, encore de l'audace, toujours de l'audace!"_
+
+Arcis-sur-Aube is a little town of three thousand souls, within an
+hour's railway journey from Troyes. The river Aube (Alba), so called
+from its silveriness flows by Danton's house. In his time and up to the
+opening of the railways the place was a port of some importance. Boats
+and barges carried goods to Troyes, Bar-sur-Aube and other towns.
+
+Of late years Arcis has been partially surrounded with pleasant shady
+walks greatly appreciated by the townsfolk. Regretfully I quitted my
+circle of acquaintances here, little dreaming under what interesting
+circumstances I should next meet Danton's great-nephew.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+RHEIMS.
+
+The grandest of all the grand cathedrals in France has been so fully
+described elsewhere, that I will not attempt to do justice to the
+subject myself. During one of my numerous visits to Rheims, however, it
+was my good fortune to enjoy a very rare experience. On the occasion of
+President Faure's funeral, the great _bourdon_ or bell, formerly only
+tolled for the death of monarchs, was now heard for the second time
+during the Third Republic. Standing under the shadow of that vast
+minster the sound seemed to come from east and west, from above and
+below, dwarfing the hum of the city to nothingness, as if echoing from
+the remotest corners of France. It was no heroic figure now knelled by
+the deepest-voiced bell in the country, but in the person of the Havre
+tanner raised to the dignity of a ruler, was embodied a magnificent
+idea, the sovereignty of the people and the overthrow of privilege.
+Never as long as I live shall I forget the boom of that great bell, and
+long the solemn sound lingered on my ears.
+
+A few days later the interior of the vast Cathedral echoed with sound
+almost as overwhelming in its force and solemnity. A grand mass was
+given in honour of the dead President.
+
+In front of the high altar stood a lofty catafalque, the rich purple
+drapery blazing with gold. The nave was filled with dazzling uniforms
+and embroidered vestments. In especially reserved seats sat the officers
+of the Legion of Honour, among these in civilian dress figuring the
+honoured citizen of Rheims who has ever retained English nationality,
+Mr. Jonathan Holden.
+
+What with beating drums, clashing cymbals, blaring trumpets and pealing
+organ, the tremendous vault seemed hardly capacious enough for the
+deafening combination of sound. As a relief came the funeral march of
+Chopin, the more subdued strains seeming almost inaudible after the
+tumult of the moment before. Never surely had plebeian requiem so
+imperial!
+
+The rich, artistic and archaeological treasures of Rheims are well
+known. I will now describe one or two sights which do not come in the
+way of the tourist.
+
+One of these is the so-called "Maison de Retraite" or associated
+home for people of small means. The handsome building, with its large
+grounds, accommodating three hundred tenants, is neither a hotel nor a
+boarding establishment, least of all an almshouse.
+
+Under municipal patronage and support the "Maison de Retraite" offers
+rooms, board, attendance, laundress and even a small plot of garden for
+the annual sum of 16 to 24 per inmate, the second sum procuring
+larger rooms and more liberal fare. Personal independence is absolutely
+unhampered except by the fact that the lodge gate is closed at 10 p.m.
+As most of the tenants of the home are elderly folks, such a rule is
+no hardship. One great advantage of the system is the protection thus
+afforded to single women and old people, and the immunity from
+household cares. Meals are taken in common, but otherwise intercourse is
+voluntary. The French temperament is so sociable, however, and chat
+is such a necessity of existence, that we saw many groups on garden
+benches, and also in the recreation and reading rooms. When the
+number of small _rentiers_ is considered, i.e., men and women of
+the middle-class living upon a minimum income, we can understand
+the usefulness of this home. I learned that the establishment is
+self-supporting, the initiatory expense having been borne by the town
+and philanthropists.
+
+We strolled about with one of the managing staff finding the inmates
+very sociable; one elderly gentleman invited us to sit down in his bit
+of garden, very proud, as he might well be, of all the flowers he had
+contrived to crowd into so small a space. We were also welcomed into
+some of the neat interiors, these varying in size according to the scale
+of payment. The class profiting by this associated home was evidently
+that of the small _bourgeoisie_.
+
+Children there seemed to be none, one and all of the tenants being
+elderly widows, widowers, bachelors or spinsters. There were, however,
+a few married couples, who, if they preferred it, could cook their
+own meals at home. For single, middle-class women here was a refuge
+answering to the conventual boarding house of the upper classes.
+
+Unmarried women in France are not nearly so numerous as in England,
+and I must say they may well envy their English and American sisters
+in spinsterhood. An unmarried French lady belonging to genteel society
+cannot cross the street unaccompanied till she has passed her fortieth
+year, nor till then may she open the pages of Victor Hugo or read a
+newspaper. Even in this "Maison de Retraite" special provision was made
+for the privacy of single ladies; whether they liked it or not they were
+expected to eat in a separate dining room, and meet for social purposes
+in a separate salon. As there is no limit to the emotional period and
+the age of sentiment, perhaps these safeguards of propriety are not
+wholly superfluous.
+
+Of course the economy of such an arrangement is very great. Think of
+a respectable fairly-educated young woman getting what good old John
+Bunyan calls "harbour and good company," in other words, all the other
+necessaries of life, with society into the bargain, for 16 a year! The
+attendance is of course somewhat rough and ready. We saw a stalwart,
+rough-haired, rather masculine-looking female setting one of the
+dinner-tables with a clatter that would drive the fastidious to
+distraction. But the good soul had evidently her heart in her work, and
+I dare aver that single-handed she got through as much as three English
+housemaids with ourselves. Would such a scheme answer in England? I
+doubt it. The Anglo-Saxon character is the reverse of sociable, and
+class distinctions are so in-rooted in the English nature that it would
+be very difficult to get ten English women together who considered
+themselves belonging to precisely the same class.
+
+Furthermore, are there with us many widows or spinsters of the same
+class enjoying even such small independent means as the sums above
+mentioned? In France, teachers, tradeswomen, female clerks and others,
+by dint of rigid economy, usually insure for themselves a small income
+before reaching old age. Fortunately habits of thrift are increasing
+in England, and our women workers have a larger field and earn higher
+wages. I had also the privilege of seeing the great wool-combing factory
+of our countryman Mr. Jonathan Holden, for upwards of forty years a
+citizen of Rheims. This town has been for centuries one of the foremost
+seats of industry in France. Mr. Holden's chimneys are kept going night
+and day, Sundays excepted, with alternating shifts of workmen. All
+the hands employed are of French nationality and--a fact speaking
+volumes--no strike has ever disturbed the amicable relations of English
+employer and French employed. The great drawback to an inspection of
+these workshops is the din of the machinery and the odour of the
+skins. But there is something that takes hold of the imagination in the
+perfection to which machinery has been carried. As we gaze upon these
+huge engines, only occasionally touched by a woman's hand, we are
+reminded of man, the pigmy guiding an elephant. We seem conscious,
+moreover, of what almost approaches human intelligence, so much of the
+work achieved appearing voluntary rather than automatic. The skins reach
+Rheims direct from Australia and are here dressed, cleaned and prepared
+for working up into cloth. If machinery is brought almost to the
+perfection of manual dexterousness, human beings attain the precision of
+machinery.
+
+I saw a neatly dressed girl at work whose sole occupation it was to tie
+up the wool, now white as snow and soft as silk, into small parcels. The
+wool already weighed came down by a little trough, and as swiftly and
+methodically as wheels set in motion, the girl's fingers folded the
+paper and tied the string. I should not like to guess how many of these
+parcels she turned off in half a minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+RHEIMS--(_continued_).
+
+Rheims possesses a handsome theatre, the acquaintance of which I
+was enabled to make under exceptional circumstances. At the risk of
+appearing slightly egotistical, I will here describe an incident which
+has other than personal interest. My visit to Damon's country, the
+particulars of which were given in a former chapter, had an especial
+object, viz., the setting of a novel of my own having the great
+conventionnel for its hero. The story was dramatised by two French
+collaborators, one of whom was at that time stage manager of the Grand
+Theatre, Rheims. What, then, was my delight to see one morning placarded
+throughout the town the announcement of the Anglo-French play? A few
+days before the first representation I had witnessed a rehearsal, and as
+I was guided through the dusky labyrinths of the theatre I could realise
+the excessive, the appalling, combustibility of such buildings. It
+is difficult, moreover, for those who have never penetrated into such
+recesses--whose only acquaintance is with the representation on the
+stage--to imagine how gloomy and sepulchral "behind the scenes"
+may appear. However, by-and-by it was all cheerful enough, and the
+rehearsal, I must say, although of a tragedy, abounded in touches of
+humour. My friend and myself were accommodated with chairs just in
+front of the stage near the prompter, a very friendly personage, who
+was evidently interested in the fact of my presence. The actors and
+actresses dropped in one by one and we exchanged a cordial handshake.
+There was nothing theatrical about the dress or manners of these ladies,
+whose ages ranged from extreme youth to middle age. They all looked
+pleasant, lady-like, ordinary women, who might have quitted their
+housekeeping or any other occupation of a domestic nature. The men, too,
+impressed me agreeably as they greeted myself and their colleagues. Very
+amusing was the commencement of proceedings.
+
+"Come, my children, put yourselves into position," said the stage
+manager, making corrections or suggestions as he went on; now somebody
+spoke too loud, and now somebody was too inarticulate, now an arm was
+held too forward, and now a leg dragged too much. Excessively diverting,
+also, the dummy show. In one scene of the play, a village schoolmaster
+is holding a class of little boys and girls. To-day, a row of chairs
+did duty for the scholars and were duly harangued, catechised, and even
+admonished with a cane. In another scene, a peasant woman appears with
+her donkey, to whom she confides a long tirade of troubles, the donkey
+for the moment being like the showman's hero in the famous story, "round
+the corner." A third and still more amusing piece of dumb show occurred
+later, when an ex-abbess acting as housekeeper to the village cur, let
+fall a basket of potatoes which were supposed to roll about the stage.
+All went well and the prompter, to whom I appealed for an opinion,
+assured me that I need be under no uneasiness, for the piece would go
+off like a house on fire.
+
+In spite of that favourable prognostic an author's first night is always
+a nervous affair, especially when that author is a foreigner, and her
+piece a translation from the original.
+
+However, everything went merry as a marriage bell, my kind friends
+filled several boxes, and perhaps one of the most interesting
+incidents of the evening was the fact that just underneath sat Danton's
+great-nephew with his clerk, who had come from Arcis-sur-Aube expressly
+for the occasion. Between the acts I went down and chatted with these
+two gentlemen, also with a French friend who had travelled from Dijon--a
+six hours' railway journey--in order to witness the piece. To the best
+of my knowledge now for the first time Danton figured on the French
+stage.
+
+It must be confessed that the theatre on this especial night was not a
+crowded house. In the first place, three large soires, which had been
+postponed on account of the President's funeral, coincided with the
+representation. In the second place, as a rule, the wealthier and more
+fashionable classes do not patronise provincial theatres, especially
+when residing within easy reach of Paris. However, the pit and gallery
+were packed, and loud was the applause with which the appearance
+of Danton in a blue tail coat, top boots and sash, and his vehement
+utterances were greeted.
+
+It had never crossed my mind that under such circumstances an author
+would be called for; when, indeed, at the close of the piece, cries of
+"Auteur! auteur!" were heard throughout the theatre, my friends begged
+me to show myself. Which, proudly enough, I did, first saluting the
+sovereign people in the gallery, then bowing less beamingly to the
+scantier audience in the boxes, finally acknowledging the acclamations
+from the pit. If "Danton Arcis" brought its author neither fame nor
+fortune, it certainly repaid her in another and most agreeable fashion.
+Two or three days later, a second representation of the piece at
+popular prices was given, and upon that occasion the house was full to
+overflowing.
+
+The Grand Theatre, Rheims, is a very handsome building, and like most
+other provincial houses maintains a company of its own, although from
+time to time it is visited by the best Paris troupes.
+
+Yet another uncommon recollection of Rheims must here be recorded. In
+September of last year, I witnessed such a spectacle as my military
+friends assured me had never before been afforded to the marvel-loving;
+in other words, the sight of a hundred and sixty thousand men--a host
+perhaps more numerous than any ever commanded by Napoleon--performing
+evolutions within range of vision.
+
+By half-past five in the morning I was off from Paris with my host and
+hostess in their motor car for the Northern railway station. The day
+of the great review broke dull and grey, and deserted indeed looked the
+usually gay and lively Paris streets. We reached the station at five
+minutes to six, i.e., five minutes before the starting of our train, and
+at once realised the neatness with which the day's programme had been
+arranged, both by the railway companies and the Government. The tens
+of thousands of sightseers had been despatched to Rheims by relays of
+trains during the night, and the station was now kept clear for the
+numerous specials conveying members of the Senate, the Chamber, and the
+Press. Here, therefore, was no crowding whatever, only a quiet stream
+of deputies, wearing their tricolour badges accompanied by their ladies,
+each deputy having the privilege of taking two.
+
+Precisely on the stroke of six, our long and well-filled train
+consisting of first-class carriages only steamed out of the station,
+taking the northern route and only making a short halt at Soissons. No
+sooner had we joined the Compigne line than we realised the tremendous
+precautions necessary in the case of visitors so august; double rows of
+soldiers were placed at short intervals on either side of the railway
+and detachments of mounted troops stationed at a distance guarded the
+route. The arrangements for our own comfort were perfect. Our train set
+us down, not at Rheims, but at Btheny itself the scene of the review, a
+temporary station having been there erected. We were, therefore within a
+hundred yards or so of our tribune, or raised stage, and of the luncheon
+tents, roads having been laid down to each by the Gnie or engineering
+body. Numbered indications conspicuously placed quite prevented any
+confusion whatever, and, indeed, it was literally impossible for
+anyone to miss his way. The only eventuality that could have spoiled
+everything, wet weather, fortunately held off until the show was over.
+The review itself was a magnificent spectacle, surely not without irony
+when we consider that this great military display, one of the greatest
+on record, was got up in honour of the first Sovereign in the world who
+had dared to propose a general disarmament! Another line of thought was
+awakened by the fact of our isolation. The specially invited guests
+of the French Government upon this occasion numbered three thousand
+persons, and it seemed that for the Czar, his train, and these, the
+great show was got up. The thousands of outsiders, sightseers, and
+excursionists, brought to Rheims by cheap trains from all parts of
+France, were nowhere; in other words, invisible.
+
+Whether or no such spectators got anything like a view of the evolutions
+I do not know. I should be inclined to think that from the distance at
+which they were kept the moving masses were mere blurs and nothing
+more. From our own tribune, adjoining that of the Presidential party,
+we commanded a view of the entire forces covering the vast plain,
+surrounded by rising ground.
+
+Amazing it was to see the dark immovable lines slowly break up, and
+as if set in motion by machinery, deploy according to orders. The vast
+plain before us was a veritable sea of men, an army, one would think,
+sufficient for the military needs of all Europe.
+
+One striking feature of these superb regiments, cavalry as well as
+infantry, was the excellence of the bands. Never before had I realised
+the inspiriting thing that martial music might be. Another interesting
+point was that afforded by the cyclists, several regiments having these
+newly formed companies. Whenever a flag was borne past, whether by foot
+or mounted soldier, the cheering was tremendous, but it was reserved for
+a regiment of Lorrainers to receive a veritable ovation. Still so fondly
+yearns the heart of France after her lost and mutilated provinces! On
+the whole, and speaking as a nave amateur, I should say that no country
+in the world could show a grander military spectacle. Enthusiasm reigned
+amongst all beholders, but there was no display of political bias or any
+discordant note. Cries of "Vive la France!" were as frequent as those of
+"Vive l'arme!"
+
+Not a policeman was to be seen anywhere, the deputies keeping order for
+themselves. And not always without an effort! People would rise from
+their seats, even stand on benches, despite the thundered out "Remain
+seated!" on all sides. On the whole, and with this exception, nothing
+could surpass the general good humour. And when the splendid cortege
+filed by at the close, delight and satisfaction beamed on every face. M.
+Loubet was so dignified, folks said, Madame Loubet was so well dressed,
+the deportment of M. Waldeck Rousseau was perfect, M. Deschanel
+handsomer than ever, and so on, every member of the Czar's, or rather
+the President's, entourage winning approval. General Andr and M.
+Delcass were very warmly received. The slim, pale, fastidious looking
+young man in flat, white cap, green tunic, and high boots, seated beside
+the portly, genial figure wearing the broad Presidential ribbon, set me
+thinking. How at the bottom of his heart does the Autocrat of All The
+Russias view these representatives of the great French Republic! How
+does he really feel towards France, the first nation of the western
+world to set the example of officially recognised self-government, the
+initiator of a system as opposed to Russian despotism as is white
+to black? Whatever may be the secret of this strange Franco-Russian
+alliance, it is apparently in the interest of peace, and, as such,
+should be warmly welcomed by all advocates of progress.
+
+The luncheon was superabundant, consisting of wines, cold meat, and
+bread in plenty. The task of finding refreshment for three thousand
+people had been satisfactorily solved. The only thing wanting was
+water. It seems that upon such an occasion no one was expected to drink
+anything short of Bordeaux, Burgundy, or pale ale.
+
+All the special trains were crowded for the return journey, made by way
+of Meaux, but everyone made way for everyone, and we reached Paris at
+eight o'clock, almost as fresh and quite as good-humoured as we had
+quitted it at dawn. If this great review was interesting from one point
+more than another, it was from the manner in which it displayed the
+wonderful organising faculty of the French mind. The most trifling
+details no more than the largest combinations can disconcert this
+pre-eminently national aptitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+
+The first of these places mentioned is a Champenois village twelve miles
+from a railway station. From the windows of my friends' chteau I look
+upon a magnificent deer park, where during the oft-time torrid heat of
+summer delicious shade is to be found.
+
+Far away vast forests bound the horizon, to the north a hot open road
+leading to Brienne-le-Chteau, where Napoleon studied as a military
+cadet; eastward, lies varied scenery between Soulaines and Bar-sur-Aube,
+there woodland ending and the vine country beginning.
+
+On one especial visit during September, not even these acres of
+closely-serried forest could induce more than a suggestion of shadow and
+coolness. Although screened from view the sun was there. Throughout a
+vast region--half a province of woodland--folks breathed the hot air of
+the Soudan. The tropic temperature admitted of no exercise during the
+day, but after four o'clock tea we broke up into parties--drove, rode,
+strolled, called upon homelier neighbours, visited quaint old churches
+hidden in the trees or forest nooks, the solitude only broken by
+pattering of deer and rabbits, or nut-cracking squirrel aloft. Here
+and there we would come upon huts of charcoal-burner and wood-cutter,
+gamekeepers and foresters, too, had their scattered lodges; such signs
+of human habitation being few and far between.
+
+We are here in the remnant of the great Celtic forest of Der. The
+straggling village of Soulaines is one long street, a little stream
+running behind the picturesque, timbered houses, many of these have
+outer wooden staircases leading to grange or storehouse. Church and
+presbytery, convent and Mairie were conspicuous.
+
+In the opposite direction, another church rose above the horizon, the
+centre of what in France is called not a village but a hamlet. Bare as
+a barn seen from far and near showed this little church, and we often
+walked thither for the sake of its picturesque surroundings. The portal
+of the quaint old building is a mass of ancient sculpture, close round
+it being grouped a few mud-built, timbered, one-storeyed dwellings all
+of a pattern.
+
+Even in France are to be found day labourers, only the very poorest,
+however, being without a cottage, plot of ground, a cow and of poultry
+their own. Many of their interiors are far neater and cleaner than those
+of the farm-houses, their occupants not being so tied to the soil from
+morning to night, not, in fact, incited to Herculean labours by the spur
+of larger possession. We visited one of the poorest villages hereabouts,
+of not quite a hundred souls, but of course, provided with church,
+school and Mairie. Many a group of potato diggers we saw in the
+exquisite twilight, suggestive of Millet, many a landscape recalling
+other masters. This handful of woodlanders--for the village is
+surrounded by forests--is perhaps as poor as any rural population to be
+found throughout France. Yet here surprises await us. Some of the better
+off hire a little land, keep cows, rear poultry, most likely in time to
+become owners of a plot. They are paid for harvest work in kind, several
+we talked to having earned enough corn for the winter's consumption--as
+they put it--our winter's bread. They are a fine, sunburnt, well-formed
+race and seem cheerful enough. In one of the poorest houses, a huge
+pipkin on the fire emitted savoury steam, and rows of small cheeses
+garnished the shelves. Good oak bedsteads, linen presses and
+old-fashioned clocks were general. Every mantel-piece had its framed
+photograph and ornamental crockery. New milk was always freely offered
+us.
+
+Within the precincts of this hamlet we find ourselves in a bluish-green
+land of mingled wood and water; above the reedy marsh, haunt of wild
+fowl, willows grew thick; here and there the water flowed freely, its
+surface broken by the plash of carp and trout. At this season all hands
+hereabouts were busy with threshing out the newly garnered corn and
+getting in potatoes. The crops are very varied, wheat, barley, lucerne,
+beetroot, buckwheat, colza, potatoes; we see a little of everything.
+Artificial manures are not much used, nor agricultural machinery to a
+great extent, except by large farmers, but the land is clean and in a
+high state of cultivation. Peasant property is the rule; labouring for
+hire, the condition of non-possession, very rare. And whether the times
+are good or evil, land dirt cheap or dear, the year's savings go to
+the purchase of a field or two and, as a necessary consequence, to
+the consolidation of the Republic and the maintenance of Parliamentary
+institutions.
+
+I will now say something of our neighbours. One of these was the parish
+priest, who had the care of between six and seven hundred souls. The
+fact may be new to some readers that a village cur, even in these days,
+receives on an average little more than Goldsmith's country parson,
+"counted rich on forty pounds a year." This cur's stipend, including
+perquisites amounted to just sixty pounds yearly, in addition to which
+he had a good house, large garden and paddock. But compare such a
+position with that of one of our own rectors and vicars!
+
+The Protestant clergy in France are better paid than those belonging
+to the orthodox faith. Being heads of families, they are supposed, and
+justly, to need more. Let it not be imagined, however, that the priest
+receives less under the Republic than under the Empire. But the cost of
+living has increased.
+
+Of course there are black sheep in the Romish fold as elsewhere; perhaps
+even the simplicity, learning and devotion to duty of the individual I
+here write of, are rare. Yet one cannot help feeling how much more
+money the Government would have at command with which to remunerate
+good workers in pacific fields if disarmament were practicable. This
+excellent priest, like other men of education and taste, would have
+relished a little travel as much as do our own vicars and curates their
+annual outing to Norway or Switzerland. What remains for recreation and
+charity after defraying household expenses and cost of a housekeeper out
+of sixty pounds a year?
+
+Next, let me say a word about the _juge de paix_ in France, as I presume
+most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than that
+of a priest. The average stipend of a justice of the peace is about a
+hundred pounds a year, with lodging, but although his duties often take
+him far afield he is not provided with a vehicle, and must either
+cycle or defray the cost of carriage hire. I know many of these rural
+magistrates, and have ever found them men of education and intelligence.
+I, now, for the first time, found one well read in English literature,
+not only able to discuss Shakespeare and Walter Scott, but the latest
+English novel appearing in translation as a feuilleton. It is well that
+these small officials should have such resources. Tied down as they are
+to remote country spots, their existence is often monotonous enough,
+especially during the winter months.
+
+It seems to be a canon of French faith that you cannot have too much
+of a good thing, anyhow in the matter of wedding festivities. Parisian
+society is beginning to adopt English saving of time and money,
+fashionable marriages there now being followed by a brief lunch and
+reception. Country-folks stick to tradition, preferring to make the
+most of an event which as a rule happens only once during a lifetime.
+Gratifying as was the experience to an English guest, especially that
+guest being a devoted admirer of France, I must honestly confess that my
+share in such a celebration constituted probably the hardest day's work
+I ever performed. Here I will explain that the bride's father was head
+forester of my host and hostess, the great folks of the place, and
+adored by their humbler neighbours. Chteau and cottage were thus
+closely, nay affectionately, interested in the important event I am
+about to describe, and this aspect of it is fully as noteworthy as the
+truly Gallic character of the long drawn out fte itself.
+
+By nine a.m. horses and carriages of the chteau, adorned with wedding
+favours, were flying madly about in all directions conveying the wedding
+party to and from the Mairie for the civil ceremony. An hour later we
+were ourselves off to the village church, the house party including
+three English guests. The enormously long religious ceremony over, a
+procession was formed headed by musicians, bride and bridegroom leading
+the way, fifty and odd couples following and the round of the village
+was made. At the door of the festive house we formed a circle, the
+newly-wedded pair embracing everyone and receiving congratulations;
+this is a somewhat lachrymose ceremony. The marriage was in every way
+satisfactory, but the nice-looking young bride, a general favourite, was
+quitting for ever her childhood's home. After some little delay we
+all took our places in two banqueting rooms, the tables being arranged
+horse-shoe wise. Facing bride and bridegroom sat my host, the second
+room being presided over by the bride's father, of whom I shall have
+something to say later. Here I give the bill of fare, merely adding that
+the festive board was neatly, even elegantly, spread, and that every
+dish was excellent:--
+
+ Hors d'oeuvre Salade de saison
+ Radis, beurre frais, Langue fume Fruits
+ Bouches la Reine Brioche. Nougat
+ Daim, sauce chassuer Desserts varies
+ Galantine truffe Vins
+ Salmis de canards Pineau, Bordeaux, Champagne
+ Choux-fleurs Caf, Liqueurs.
+ Dinde truffe.
+
+
+Looking down the lines of well-dressed people, all with the exception of
+ourselves belonging to the same rank as the bride, I could but be struck
+with the good looks, gentle bearing, and general appearance of everyone.
+As to the head forester, he was one of Nature's gentlemen, and might
+easily have passed for a general or senator. At the table sat several
+young girls of the village, each having a cavalier, all these dressed
+very neatly and comporting themselves like well-bred young ladies
+without presumption or awkwardness. During the inevitable pauses between
+dish and dish, one after another of these pretty girls stood up and
+gratified the company with a song, the performance costing perhaps an
+effort, but being got through simply and naturally. In the midst of the
+banquet, which lasted over three hours, two professionals came to sing
+and recite. From the breakfast table, after toasts,--the afternoon being
+now well advanced--we again formed a procession to the Mairie, in front
+of which _al fresco_ dancing commenced. Add that this out-of-door ball
+lasted till a second dinner, the dinner being followed by a second ball
+lasting far into the small hours. Nor did the celebration end here.
+The following day was equally devoted to visits, feasts, toasts, and
+dancing. What a national heritage is this capacity for fellowship,
+gaiety, and harmless mirth!
+
+Bar-sur-Aube lies twelve miles off and a beautiful drive it is thither
+from Soulaines. We gradually leave forest, pasture and arable
+land, finding ourselves amid vineyards. At the little village of
+Ville-sur-Terre, we one day halted at a farm-house for a chat, the
+housewife most kindly presenting me with two highly decorative plates.
+
+As we approach Bar-sur-Aube we come upon a wide and beautiful prospect,
+wooded hills dominating the plain.
+
+This little town is very prettily situated, and like every other in
+France possesses some old churches. Perhaps its most famous child is
+Bombonnel, the great panther-slayer, born close by, who died at Dijon
+and whose souvenirs bequeathed to me as a legacy I have given elsewhere.
+The son of a working glazier, he made a little fortune as hawker of
+stockings in the streets of New Orleans, returned to France, cleared
+the Algerian Tell of panthers, for a time enjoyed ease with dignity in
+Burgundy; on the outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870, as leader
+of a thousand _francs-tireurs_, gave the Germans more trouble than any
+commander of an army corps, twice had a price of 1,000 set upon his
+head, was glorified by Victor Hugo, received the decoration of the
+Legion of Honour, and as a reward for his patriotic services several
+hundred acres of land in Algeria. A gigantic statue of Sant Hubert, the
+patron of hunters, now commemorates the great little man, for he was
+short of statue, in the cemetery of Dijon.
+
+Bar-sur-Aube is connected with another notoriety, the infamous Madame
+de la Motte, the arch-adventuress, who, a descendant herself of Valois
+kings, proved the undoing of Marie Antoinette. As was truly said by
+a great contemporary:--"The affair of the Diamond Necklace," wrote
+Mirabeau, "has been the forerunner of the Revolution."
+
+This Jeanne de Valois, rescued from the gutter by a benovolent lady of
+title and a charitable priest, presents a psychological study rare even
+in the annals of crime. Never, perhaps, were daring, unscrupulousness,
+and the faculty of combination linked with so complete a disregard to
+consequences. The moving spring of her actions, often so complicated and
+foolhardy, was love of money and display. It seemed as if in her person,
+was accumulated the lavishness of French Royal mistresses from Diane
+de Poitiers down to Madame Dubarry. There was a good deal of the Becky
+Sharp about her too, although there is nothing in her history to show
+that, like Thackeray's heroine, "she had no objection to pay people if
+she had the money." If, indeed, anything in the shape of ethics guided
+the most astoundingly ingenious swindler we know of, it was some such
+principle as this: she ought to have been at Versailles, there being
+received as a recognised Princess of the Royal House; since, through
+no fault whatever of her own, she was not, she had a perfect right to
+avenge herself upon royalty and society in general.
+
+How she wormed herself into the confidence of the Cardinal de Rohan, a
+man of the world and of education, would seem wholly unaccountable
+but for one fact. The Prince Primate had faith in Cagliostro and
+his nostrums, and when an individual has recourse to astrologers
+and fortune-tellers, we are quite in a position to gauge his mental
+condition. Like Mdlle. Couesdon of contemporary fame, Cagliostro held
+intercourse with the angel Gabriel, but his occult powers and privileges
+far exceeded those of the Parisian lady-seer. He was actually in the
+habit of dining with Henri IV., and two days before the Cardinal's
+arrest made his client believe that he had just accepted such an
+invitation!
+
+It had been Rohan's ambition to obtain the favour of the Queen and a
+foremost position at court, hence the readiness with which he fell into
+the trap. For "the Valois orphan," now Comtesse de la Motte, not only
+possessed great personal attractions, but an extraordinary gift of
+persuasiveness. Without much apparent trouble she made the Cardinal
+believe that she was in the Queen's favour, and indeed in her
+confidence. Having got so far the rest was easy.
+
+How the acquisition of the already celebrated Diamond Necklace was first
+thought of, how, by the aid of willing tools, she matured and carried
+out her deep-laid and diabolical scheme, reads like an adventure from
+the "Arabian Nights." The personification of the Queen by a little
+dressmaker who happened to resemble her, the forgery of the Royal
+signature, the final attainment of the diamonds, all seemed so easy to
+this consummate trickster that it is small wonder she became intoxicated
+with success and blind to consequences. No sooner was the necklace in
+her possession than, of course, as fast as possible it was turned, not
+into money, but into money's worth. Houses and lands, equipages and
+furniture, costly apparel, and delicacies for the table were purchased,
+not with louis d'or, but with diamonds.
+
+We read of her triumphant entry into the little town of Bar-sur-Aube,
+cradle of the Saint Rmy-Valois family, in a berline with white
+trappings and the Valois armorials, before and behind the carriage,
+which was drawn by "four English horses with short tails," rode
+lacqueys, whilst on the footboard ready to open the door stood a negro,
+"covered, from head to foot with silver." Still more dazzling was the
+dress of Madame la Comtesse, richest brocade trimmed with rubies and
+emeralds. As to the Count, not content with having rings on every finger
+he wore four gold watch chains! Besides holding open house when at home,
+the pair had a table always spread with dainties for those who chose to
+partake in their hosts' absence. Among the toys paid for in diamonds was
+an automatic bird that warbled and flapped its wings. This was intended
+for the amusement of visitors.
+
+The carnival proved of short duration. It was on the 1st of February,
+1783, that the diamond necklace was handed over to Madame de la Motte,
+Rohan receiving in return the forged signature of "Marie-Antoinette de
+France." On August of the same year, in the midst of a banquet given
+at Bar-sur-Aube, a visitor arrived with startling news. "The Prince
+Cardinal de Rohan, Grand Almoner of France, was on the Festival of
+Assumption, arrested in pontifical robes, charged with having purchased
+a diamond necklace in the name of the Queen."
+
+The charm of these little French towns and rustic spots lies in their
+remoteness, the feeling they give us of being so entirely aloof from
+familiar surroundings. In many a small Breton or Norman town we hear
+little else but English speech, and in the one general shop of tiny
+villages see _The New York Herald_ on sale. But from the time of leaving
+Nemours to that of reaching the farthest point mentioned in these
+sketches we encounter no English or American tourists. This essentially
+foreign atmosphere is not less agreeable than conducive to instruction.
+We are thus thrown into direct contact with the country people and are
+enabled to realise French modes of life and thought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.
+
+Within the last twenty-five years so many new lines of railway have been
+opened in France that there is no longer any inducement--I am inclined
+to say excuse--for keeping to the main road. Yet, strangely
+enough, English tourists mostly ignore such opportunities. For one
+fellow-countryman we meet on the route described here, hundreds are
+encountered on the time-honoured roads running straight from Paris to
+Switzerland. Quit Dijon by any other way and the English-speaking world
+is lost sight of, perhaps more completely than anywhere else on the
+civilised globe. Again and again it has happened to myself to be
+regarded in rural France as a kind of curiosity, the first subject of
+Queen Victoria ever met with; again and again I have spent days, nay
+weeks, on French soil, the sole reminder of my native land being the
+daily paper posted in London. It is now many years since I first visited
+St. Jean de Losne, in company of a French acquaintance, a notary, both
+of us being bound to a country-house on the Sane. At that time the
+railway did not connect it with Dijon, and in brilliant September
+weather we jogged along by diligence, a pleasant five hours' journey
+enough. My companion, a native of the Cte d'Or, seemed to know everyone
+we passed on the way, whenever we stopped to change horses getting out
+for a gossip with this friend and that he had taken the precaution to
+provide himself with a huge loaf of bread, from which he hacked off
+morsels for us both from time to time. As we had started at seven
+o'clock in the morning, and got no djener till past noon, the doles
+were acceptable. The fellow-traveller of that first journey--alas! With
+how many friends of the wine country!--has long since gone to his rest.
+The second time I set forth alone, taking my seat in the slow--the very
+slow--train running alongside the Canal de Bourgogne. On the central
+platforms of the Dijon railway station, crowds of English and American
+tourists were hurrying to their trains, bound respectively for Paris and
+Geneva. No sooner was I fairly off, my fellow travellers being two or
+three country-folks, than the conventionalities of travel had vanished.
+Surroundings as well as scenery became entirely French.
+
+The Burgundian character is very affable, and although people may
+wonder what can be your errand in remote regions, they never show their
+curiosity after disagreeable fashion. They are delighted to discover
+that interest in France--artistic, economic, or industrial--has led you
+thither, and will afford any assistance or information in their power.
+They seem to regard the wayfaring Britisher as whimsical, that is all.
+
+A train that crawls has this advantage, we can see everything by the
+way, villages, crops, and methods of cultivation. The landscape soon
+changes. The familiar characteristics of the wine country disappear.
+Instead of vine-clad hills, nurseries of young plants grafted on
+American stocks, and vineyard after vineyard in rich maturity, we now
+see hop gardens, colza fields, and wide pastures. Here and there we
+obtain a glimpse of some walled-in farmhouse, recalling the granges of
+our own Isle of Wight.
+
+Alongside the railway runs the canal, that important waterway connecting
+the Seine with the Sane; but the Sane itself, Mr. Hamerton's favourite
+river, is not seen till we reach our destination.
+
+The little town of St. Jean de Losne, although unknown to English
+readers, is one of the most historic of France. No other, indeed, boasts
+of more honourable renown. As Jeanne d'Arc had done just two centuries
+before, St. Jean de Losne saved the country in 1636. When the Imperial
+forces under Galas attempted the occupation of Burgundy, the dauntless
+townsfolk long held the enemy at bay and compelled final retreat. After
+generations profited by this heroism. Until the great year of 1789, the
+town, by royal edict, enjoyed complete immunity from taxation. On the
+outbreak of the Revolution, with true patriotic spirit, the citizens
+surrendered those privileges, of their own free will sharing the public
+burdens.
+
+The first sight that meets the eye on entering St. Jean de Losne is
+the monument erected in commemoration of the siege. "Better late than
+never," is a proverb applicable to public as well as private affairs of
+conscience.
+
+A little farther, and we reach the church of St. Jean. It contains a
+magnificent pulpit, carved from a single block of rich red marble, the
+niches ornamented with charming statuettes of the apostles. Close by is
+the Htel de Ville, in which are some interesting historic relics. As I
+passed through the courtyard, I saw an odd sight. One might have fancied
+that a second Imperial army threatened a siege, and that the townsfolk
+were laying in stores. The pavement was piled with bread and meat,
+whilst butchers and bakers were busily engaged in dividing these into
+portions, authorities, municipal, military and police, looking on.
+
+I learned that these rations were for the regiments quartered in the
+town during the autumn manoeuvres. Every day such distributions take
+place; in country places the troops have recourse to the peasants, very
+often being treated as guests. A young friend, serving his three years,
+told me that nowhere had he found country folk more hospitable than in
+the Cte d'Or. No sooner did the soldiers make their appearance in a
+village, than forth came the inhabitants to welcome them, officers being
+carried off to chteaux, men by twos and threes to the home of cur or
+small owner. "Not a peasant," he said, "but would bring up a bottle
+of good wine from his cellar, and often after dinner we would get up a
+dance out of doors. On the saddle sometimes from two in the morning till
+twelve at noon, the kind reception and the jollity of the evening made
+up for the hardship and fatigue. We have just had several days of bad
+weather, and had to sleep on straw in barns and outhouses, wherever
+indeed shelter was to be had. Not one of us ever lost heart or temper;
+we remained gay as larks all the time."
+
+An hour's railway journey from St. Jean de Losne takes the traveller to
+Lons-le-Saulnier, beautifully situated at the foot of the Jura range on
+the threshold of wild and romantic scenery.
+
+A decade had not robbed this little town of its old-world look familiar
+to me, but meantime a new Lons-le-Saulnier had sprung up. Since my first
+visit a handsome bathing establishment has been built, with casino,
+concert-room, and all the other essentials of an inland watering-place.
+The waters are especially recommended for skin affections, gout, and
+rheumatism. Formerly the mineral springs of Lons, as the townsfolk
+lazily call the place, were chiefly frequented by residents and near
+neighbours. Improved accommodation, increased accessibility, cheapened
+travel and additional attractions, have changed matters. The season
+opening in May, and lasting till the end of October, is now patronised
+by hundreds of visitors from all parts of eastern France. These health
+resorts are much more sociable than our own. Folks drop alike social,
+political, and religious differences for the time being, and cultivate
+the art of being agreeable as only French people can. Excursions,
+picnics, and pleasure parties are arranged; in the evening the young
+folks dance whilst their elders play a rubber of whist, chat, look on,
+or make marriages. Many a wedding is arranged during the _Saison des
+Bains_, nor can such unions be called _mariages de convenance_, as in
+holiday-time intercourse is comparatively unrestricted. Grown-up or
+growing-up sons and daughters then meet as those on English or American
+soil.
+
+Lons-le-Saulnier possesses little of interest except its Museum, rich
+in modern sculpture, and its quaint arcades, recalling the period of
+Spanish rule in Franche Comt. The excursions lying within easy reach
+are numerous and delightful. Foremost of these is a visit to the
+marvellous rock-shut valley of Baume-les-Messieurs, so called to
+distinguish it from Baume-les-Dames near Besanon. The descent is made
+on foot, and at first sight appears not only perilous but impracticable,
+the zigzag path being cut in almost perpendicular shelves of rock.
+This mountain staircase, or the "chelle des Baumes," is not to be
+recommended to those afflicted with giddiness. Little sunshine reaches
+the heart of the gorge, yet below the turf is brilliant, a veritable
+islet of green threaded by a tiny river. The natural walls shutting us
+in have a majestic aspect, but playful and musical is the Seille as it
+ripples at our feet. Travellers of an adventuresome turn can explore the
+stalactite caverns and other marvels around; not the least of these is
+a tiny lake, the depth of which has never been sounded. For half-a-mile
+the valley winds towards the straggling village of Baume, and there the
+marvels abruptly end.
+
+Nothing finer in the way of scenery is to be found throughout eastern
+France. In the ancient Abbey Church are two masterpieces, a retable in
+carved wood and a tomb ornamented with exquisite statuettes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+NANCY.
+
+It is a pleasant six hours' journey from Dijon via Chalindrey to Nancy.
+We pass the little village of Gemeaux, in which amongst French friends I
+have spent so many happy days.
+
+From the railway we catch sight of the monticule crowned by an obelisk;
+surmounting the vine-clad slopes, we also obtain a glimpse of its "Ormes
+de Sully," or group of magnificent elms, one of many in France supposed
+to have been planted by the great Sully. Since my first acquaintance
+with this neighbourhood, more than twenty years ago, the aspect of the
+country hereabouts has in no small degree changed. Hop gardens in
+many spots have replaced vineyards, owing to the devastation of the
+phylloxera. It was in the last years of the third Empire that the
+inhabitants of Roquemaure on the Rhne found their vines mysteriously
+withering.
+
+A little later the left bank was attacked, and about the same time the
+famous brandy producing region of Cognac in the Charente showed
+similar symptoms. The cause of the mischief, the terrible Phylloxera
+devastatrix, was brought to light in 1868. This tiny insect is hardly
+visible to the naked eye, yet so formed by Nature as to be a wholesale
+engine of destruction, its phenomenal productiveness being no less fatal
+than its equally phenomenal powers of locomotion. One of these tiny
+parasites alone propagates at the rate of millions of eggs in a season,
+a thousand alone sufficing to destroy two acres and a half of vineyard.
+As formidable as this terrible fertility is the speed of the insect's
+wings or rather sails according extraordinary ease of movement. A gust
+of wind, a mere breath of air, and like a grain of dust or a tuft of
+thistledown, this germ of destruction is borne whither chance directs,
+to the certain ruin of any vineyard on which it lights. The havoc spread
+with terrible rapidity. From every vine-growing region of France arose
+cries of consternation. Within the space of a few years hundreds of
+thousands of acres were hopelessly blighted. In 1878 the invader was
+first noticed at Meursault in Burgundy; a few days later it appeared in
+the Botanical Gardens of Dijon. The cost of replanting vineyards with
+American stocks is so heavy, viz.: twenty pounds per hectare, that even
+many rich vintagers have preferred to cultivate other crops. Some owners
+have sold their lands outright.
+
+On quitting Is-sur-Tille we enter the so-called Plat de Langres, or
+richly cultivated plains stretching between that town and Toul, in the
+Department of the Meurthe and Moselle.
+
+With the almost sudden change of landscape--woods, winding rivers, and
+hayfields in which peasants are getting in their autumn crop, literally
+mauve-tinted from the profusion of autumn crocuses--we encounter
+sharp contrasts, the events of 1870-1 changing the French frontier,
+necessitating the transformation we now behold--once quiet, old-world
+towns now wearing the aspect of a vast camp, everywhere to be seen
+military defences on a wholly inconceivable scale. It is comforting to
+hear from the lips of those who should know, that at the present time
+war is impossible, the engines of warfare being so tremendous that the
+result of a conflict would be simply annihilation on both sides. After
+ten years' absence, and in spite of radical changes, the elegant,
+exquisitely kept town of Nancy appears little altered to me. The ancient
+capital of Lorraine is now one of the largest garrisons on the eastern
+frontier, but the military aspect is not too obtrusive. Except for the
+perpetual roll of the heavy artillery waggons and perpetual sight of the
+red pantalon, we are apt to forget the present position of Nancy from a
+strategic point of view.
+
+Other changes are pleasanter to dwell on. The Facults, or schools of
+medicine, science, and law, removed hither from Strasburg after the
+annexation, have immensely increased the intellectual status of Nancy,
+whilst from the commercial and industrial side the advance has been
+no less. Its population has doubled since the events of 1870-1, and is
+constantly increasing. Why so few English travellers visit this dainty
+and attractive little capital is not easy to explain. More interesting
+even than the artistic and historic collections of Nancy is the
+celebrated School of Forestry. Formerly a few young Englishmen
+were out-students of this school, but since the study had been made
+accessible at home the foreign element at the time of my visit,
+consisted of a few Roumanians, sent by their Government. The cole
+Forestire, courteously shown to visitors, was founded sixty years ago
+and is conducted on almost a military system. Only twenty-four students
+are received annually, and these must have passed severe examinations
+either at the cole Agronomique of Paris, or at the cole Polytechnique.
+The staff consists of a director and six professors, all paid by the
+State. Two or three years form the curriculum and successful students
+are sure of obtaining good Government appointments. Forestry being a
+most important service, every branch of natural science connected with
+the preservation of forests, and afforesting is taught, the school
+collections forming a most interesting and wholly unique museum. Here we
+see, exquisitely arranged as books on library shelves, specimens of
+wood of all countries, whilst elsewhere sections from the tiniest to
+the gigantic stems of America. Very instructive, too, are the models of
+those regions in France already afforested, and of those undergoing
+the process; we also see the system by means of which the soil is so
+consolidated as to render plantation possible, namely, the arresting of
+mountain torrents by dams and barrages. In the Dauphin, and French
+Alps generally, many denuded tracks are in course of transformation, the
+expense being partly borne by the State and partly by the communes. It
+is impossible to over-estimate the importance of such works, alike
+from a climatic, economic, and hygienic point of view. The extensive
+eucalyptus plantations in Algeria, teach us the value of afforesting,
+vast tracks having been thereby rendered healthful and cultivable.
+
+A strikingly beautiful city, sad of aspect withal, is this ancient
+capital of Lorraine, ever wearing half mourning, as it seems, for the
+loss of its sister Alsace.
+
+Unforgettable is the glimpse of the Place Stanislas, with its bronze
+gates, fountains, and statue, worthy of a great capital; of the
+beautiful figure of Duke Antonio of Lorraine on horseback, under
+an archway of flamboyant Gothic; of the Ducal Palace and its airy
+colonnade; lastly, of the picturesque old city gate, the Porte de la
+Crafie, one of the most striking monuments of the kind in France.
+
+All these things may be glanced at in an hour, but in order to enjoy
+Nancy thoroughly, a day or two should be devoted to it, and creature
+comforts are to be had in the hotels.
+
+In the Ducal Palace are shown the rich tapestries found in the tent of
+Charles le Tmraire after his defeat before Nancy, and other relics of
+that Haroun-al-Raschid of his epoch, who bivouacked off gold and silver
+plate, and wore on the battle-field diamonds worth half a million. The
+cenotaphs of the Dukes of Lorraine are in a little church outside
+the town--the _chapelle ronde_, as the splendid little mausoleum is
+designated, its imposing monuments of black marble and richly-decorated
+octagonal dome, making up a solemn and beautiful whole. Graceful and
+beautiful also are the monuments in the church itself, and those of
+another church, des Cordeliers, close to the Ducal Palace.
+
+Nancy is especially rich in monumental sculpture, but it is in the
+cathedral that we are enchanted by the marble statues of the four
+doctors of the church--St. Augustine, St. Grgoire, St. Lon, and St.
+Jerome. These are the work of Nicholas Drouin, a native of the town,
+and formerly ornamented a tomb in the church of the Cordeliers just
+mentioned. The physiognomy, expression, and pose of St. Augustine are
+well worthy of a sculptor's closest study, but it is rather as a
+whole than in detail that this exquisite statue delights the ordinary
+observer.
+
+All four sculptures are noble works of art; the beautiful, dignified
+figure of St. Augustine somehow takes strongest hold of the imagination.
+We would fain return to it again and again, as indeed we would fain
+return to all else we have seen in the fascinating city of Nancy.
+
+From Nancy, by way of Epinal, we may easily reach the heart of the
+Vosges.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.
+
+At the railway station of Nancy, I was met by a French family party, my
+hosts to be in a chteau on the other side of the French frontier.
+
+We had jogged on pleasantly enough for about half an hour, when the
+gentlemen of the party, with (to me) perplexing smiles, briskly folded
+their newspapers and consigned them, not to their pockets or rugs, but
+to their ladies, by whom the journals were secreted in underskirts.
+
+"We are approaching the frontier," said Madame to me.
+
+I afterwards learned that only one or two French newspapers are allowed
+to circulate in the annexed provinces, the _Temps_ and others, the
+names of which I forget; for the first and second offence of smuggling
+prohibited newspapers, the offender is subjected to a reprimand, the
+third offence is punished by a fine, the fourth involves imprisonment.
+Now, as all of us know who have lived in France, the _Figaro_ is a
+veritable necessity to the better-off classes in France, the _Times_ to
+John Bull not more so. Similarly, to the peasant and the artisan, the
+_Petit Journal_ takes the place of the half-penny newspaper in England.
+This deprivation is cruelly felt, and is part of the system introduced
+by William II.
+
+Custom-house dues are at all times vexatious, but on the French-Prussian
+frontier they are so arranged as to provoke patriotic feeling. It may
+seem a foolish fancy for French folks, German subjects of the Kaiser,
+to prefer French soap and stationery, yet what more natural than the
+purchase of such things when within easy reach? Thus, on alighting at
+the frontier, not only were trunks and baskets turned out, we were
+all eyed from head to foot suspiciously. My hosts' newspapers were
+not unearthed, certainly; perhaps their rank and position counted for
+something. But one country girl had to pay duty on a shilling box of
+writing paper, another was mulcted to half the value of a bottle of
+scent, and so on. There was something really pathetic in the forced
+display of these trifles, the purchasers being working people and
+peasants. All French goods and productions are exorbitantly taxed. Thus
+a lady must pay three or four shillings duty on a bonnet perhaps costing
+twenty in France. On a cask of wine, the duty often exceeds the price of
+its contents, and, according to an inexorable law of human nature, the
+more inaccessible are these patriotic luxuries, so the more persistently
+will they be coveted and indulged in.
+
+Custom House officials on the Prussian side have no easy time of it,
+ladies especially giving them no little trouble. The duty on a new dress
+sent or brought from France across the frontier is ten francs; and
+we were told an amusing story of a French lady, who thought to neatly
+circumvent the douane. She was going from Nancy to Strasburg to a
+wedding, and in the ladies' waiting-room on the French side changed her
+dress, putting on the new, a rich costume bought for the ceremony.
+The officials got wind of the matter. The dress was seized and finally
+redeemed after damages of a thousand francs!
+
+Persons in indifferent circumstances, however patriotic they may be, can
+subsist upon German beer, soap, and writing paper. The blood tax, upon
+which I shall say something further on, is a wholly different matter.
+
+A short drive brought us to a noble chteau, inside a beautifully wooded
+park, the iron gateway showing armorial bearings. Indoors there
+was nothing to remind me that I had exchanged Republican France for
+autocratic Prussia. Guests, servants, speech, usages, books, were
+French, or, in the case of the three latter, English. Every member of
+the family spoke English, afternoon tea was served as at home, and the
+latest Tauchnitz volumes lay on the table.
+
+Difficult indeed it seemed to realise that I had crossed the frontier,
+that though within easy reach, almost in sight of it, the miss, alas!
+Was as good as a mile.
+
+Alsace-Lorraine, I may here mention, is a verbal annexation dating
+from 1871. Whilst Alsace was German until its conquest by Louis XIV.,
+Lorraine, the country of Jeanne d'Arc, had been in part French and
+French-speaking for centuries. Alsace under French _rgime_ retained
+alike Protestantism and Teutonic speech. We can easily understand that
+the changes of 1871 should come much harder to the Catholic Lorrainers
+than to their Protestant Alsatian neighbours.
+
+Bitterness of feeling does not seem to me to diminish with time. On the
+occasion of my third visit to Germanised France, I found things much
+the same, the clinging to France ineradicable as ever, nothing like the
+faintest sign of reconciliation with Imperial rule.
+
+One might suppose that, after a generation, some slight approach to
+intercourse would exist among the French and Prussian populations. By
+the upper classes the Germans, no matter what their rank or position,
+remain tabooed as were Jews in the Ghetto of former days.
+
+At luncheon next day, my host smilingly informed me that he had filled
+up the paper left by the commissary of police, concerning their newly
+arrived English visitor. We are here, it must be remembered, in a
+perpetual state of siege.
+
+"I put down Canterbury as your birthplace--" he began.
+
+"Good Heavens!" exclaimed I, "I was born near Ipswich."
+
+"Oh!" he said, smiling, "I just put down the first name that occurred to
+me, and filled in particulars as to age, etc.," here he bowed, "after a
+fashion which I felt would be satisfactory to yourself."
+
+This kind of domiciliary visit may appear a joking matter, but to live
+under a state of siege is no subject for pleasantry, as I shall show
+further on. Here is another instance of the comic side of annexation, if
+the adjective could be applied to such a subject. In the salon I noticed
+a sofa cushion, covered, as I thought to my astonishment, with the
+Prussian flag. But my hostess smilingly informed me that, as the
+Tricolour was forbidden in Germanised Lorraine, by way of having the
+next best thing to it, she had used the Russian colours, symbol of the
+new ally of France.
+
+Another vexation of unfortunate _annexs_ is in the matter of
+bookbinding. French people naturally like to have their books bound in
+French style, but it is next to impossible to get this done in Alsace.
+If the books are bound in France, there is the extra cost of carriage
+and duty.
+
+A very pleasant time I had under this French roof on German soil. Our
+days were spent in walks and drives, our evenings entertained with music
+and declamation. Now we had the Kreutzer Sonata exquisitely performed by
+amateur musicians, now we listened to selections from Lamartine, Nadaud,
+Victor Hugo and others, as admirably rendered by a member of this
+accomplished family, all the members of which were now gathered
+together. I saw something alike of their poorer and richer neighbours,
+all of course being their country-people. This social circle, including
+the household staff, was rigorously French.
+
+Let me now describe a Lorraine lunch, as the French _goter_ or
+afternoon collation is universally called, our hosts being a family of
+peasant farmers, their guests the house party from the chteau. We had
+only to drive a mile or two before quitting annexed France for France
+proper, the respective frontiers indicated by tall posts bearing the
+name and eagle of the German Empire and the R.F. of France.
+
+"You are now on French soil," said my host to me with a smile of
+satisfaction, and the very horses seemed to realise the welcome fact.
+Right merrily they trotted along, joyfully sniffing the air of home.
+
+The Lorraine villages are very unlike their spick and span neighbours of
+Alsace, visited by me two years before. Why Catholic villages should be
+dirty and Protestant ones clean, I will not attempt to explain. Such,
+however, is the case. As we drove through the line of dung-heaps and
+liquid manure rising above what looked like barns, I was ill-prepared
+for the comfort and tidiness prevailing within. What a change when the
+door opened, and our neatly dressed entertainers ushered us into their
+dining-room! Here, looking on to a well-kept garden was a table spread
+with spotless linen, covers being laid as in a middle-class house.
+An armchair, invariable token of respect, was placed for the English
+visitor; then we sat down to table, two blue-bloused men, uncle and
+nephew, and three elderly women in mob caps and grey print gowns,
+dispensing hospitality to their guests, belonging to the _noblesse_
+of Lorraine. There was no show of subservience on the one part, or of
+condescension on the other. Conversation flowed easily and gaily as at
+the chteau itself.
+
+I here add that whilst the French _noblesse_ and _bourgeoisie_ remain
+apart as before the Revolution, with the peasant folk it is not so.
+These good people were not tenants or in any way dependents on my
+hosts. They were simply humble friends, the great tie being that of
+nationality. The order of the feast was peculiar. Being Friday no
+delicacy in the shape of a raised game pie could be offered; we
+were, therefore, first of all served with bread and butter and _vin
+ordinaire_. Then a dish of fresh honey in the comb was brought out;
+next, a huge open plum tart. When the tart had disappeared, cakes
+of various kinds and a bottle of good Bordeaux were served; finally,
+grapes, peaches, and pears with choice liqueurs. Healths were drunk,
+glasses chinked, and when at last the long lunch came to an end, we
+visited dairy, bedrooms, and garden, all patterns of neatness. This
+family of small peasant owners is typical of the very best rural
+population in France. The united capital of the group--uncle, aunts and
+nephew--would not perhaps exceed a few thousand pounds, but the land
+descending from generation to generation had increased in value owing to
+improved cultivation. Hops form the most important crop hereabouts. This
+village of French Lorraine testified to the educational liberality of
+the Republic. For the three hundred and odd souls the Government here
+provides schoolmaster, schoolmistress, and a second female teacher for
+the infant school, their salaries being double those paid under the
+Empire.
+
+Now a word concerning the blood-tax. Rich and well-to-do French
+residents in the annexed provinces can afford to send their sons across
+the frontier and pay the heavy fines imposed for default. With the
+artisan and peasant the case is otherwise. Here defection from military
+service means not only lifelong separation but worldly ruin. To the
+wealthy an occasional sight of their young soldiers in France is an easy
+matter. A poor man must stay at home. If his sons quit Alsace-Lorraine
+in order to go through their military service on French soil, they
+cannot return until they have attained their forty-fifth year, and the
+penalty of default is so high that it means, and is intended to mean,
+ruin. There is also another crying evil of the system. French conscripts
+forced into the German Army are always sent as far as possible from
+home. If they fall ill and die, kith or kin can seldom reach them.
+Again, as French is persistently spoken in the home, and German only
+learnt under protest at the primary school, the young _annex_ enters
+upon his enforced military service with an imperfect knowledge of the
+latter language, the hardships of his position being thereby immensely
+enhanced. No one here hinted to me of any especial severity being shown
+to French conscripts on this account, but we can easily understand the
+disadvantage under which they labour. I visited a tenant farmer on the
+other side of the frontier, whose only son had lately died in hospital
+at Berlin. The poor father was telegraphed for but arrived too late, the
+blow saddening for ever an honest and laborious life. This farmer was
+well-to-do, but had other children. How then could he pay the fine
+imposed upon the defaulter? And, of course, French service involved
+lifelong separation. Cruel, indeed, is the dilemma of the unfortunate
+_annex_. But the blood-tax is felt in other ways. During my third stay
+in Germanised Lorraine the autumn manoeuvres were taking place. This
+means that alike rich and poor are compelled to lodge and cook for
+as many soldiers as the authorities choose to impose upon them. I was
+assured by a resident that poor people often bid the worn-out men to
+their humble board, the conscripts' fare being regulated according to
+the strictest economy. In rich houses, German officers receive similar
+hospitality, but we can easily understand under what conditions.
+
+The annexed provinces are of course being Germanised by force.
+Immigration continues at a heavy cost. Here is an instance in point.
+
+When Alsace was handed over to the German Government it boasted of
+absolute solvency. It is now burdened with debt, owing, among many other
+reasons, to the high salaries received by the more important German
+officials; the explanation of this being that the position of these
+functionaries is so unpleasant they have to be bribed into such
+expatriation. Thus their salaries are double what they were under
+French rule. Not that friction often occurs between the German
+civil authorities and French subjects; everyone bears witness to the
+politeness of the former, but it is impossible for them not to feel the
+distastefulness of their own presence. On the other hand, the perpetual
+state of siege is a grievance daily felt. Free speech, liberty of the
+press, rights of public meeting, are unknown. Not long since, a peasant
+just crossed the frontier, and as he touched French soil, shouted "Vive
+la France!" On his return he was convicted of _lse majest_ and sent
+to prison. Another story points to the same moral. At a meeting of a
+village council an aged peasant farmer, who cried "We are not subjects
+but servants of William II." Was imprisoned for six weeks. The occasion
+that called forth the protest was an enforced levy for some public
+works of no advantage whatever to the inhabitants. Sad indeed is the
+retrospect, sadder still the looking forward, with which we quit French
+friends in the portions of territory now known as Alsace-Lorraine.
+And when we say "Adieu" the word has additional meaning. Epistolary
+intercourse, no more than table-talk, is sacred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED ALSACE.
+
+Who would quit Alsace without a pilgrimage to Saverne and the country
+home in which Edmond About wrote his most delightful pages and in which
+he dispensed such princely hospitality? The author of "Le Fellah " was
+forced to forsake his beloved retreat after the events of 1870-1; the
+experiences of this awful time are given in his volume "Alsace," and
+dedicated to his son--_pour qu'il se souvienne_--in order that he might
+remember. Here also as under that Lorraine roof I felt myself in France.
+At the time of my visit the property was for sale. French people,
+however, are loth to purchase estates in the country they may be said
+to inhabit on sufferance, while rich Germans prefer to build palatial
+villas within the triple fortifications and thirteen newly constructed
+forts which are supposed to render Strasburg impregnable.
+
+The railway takes us from Strasburg in an hour to the picturesque old
+town of Saverne, beautifully placed above the Zorn. Turning our backs
+upon the one long street winding upwards to the chteau, we follow a
+road leading into the farthermost recesses of the valley, from which
+rise on either side the wooded spurs of the lower Vosges. Here in
+a natural _cul-de-sac_, wedged in between pine-clad slopes, is as
+delightful a retreat as genius or a literary worker could desire. On the
+superb September day of my visit the place looked its best, and warm
+was the welcome we received from the occupiers, a cultivated and
+distinguished French Protestant family, formerly living at Srasburg, but
+since the events of 1870-1 removed to Nancy. They hired this beautiful
+place from year to year, merely spending a few weeks here during the
+Long Vacation. The intellectual atmosphere still recalled bygone days,
+when Edmond About used to gather round him literary brethren, alike
+French and foreign. Pleasant it was to find here English-speaking,
+England-loving, French people. Nothing can be simpler than the house
+itself, in spite of its somewhat pretentious tower of which About wrote
+so fondly. His study is a small, low-pitched room, not too well lighted,
+but having a lovely outlook; beyond, the long, narrow gardens, fruit,
+flower and vegetable, one leading out of another, rising pine woods and
+the lofty peaks of the Vosges. So remote is this spot that wild deer
+venture into the gardens, whilst squirrels make themselves at home
+close to the house doors. Our host gave me much information about the
+peasants. Although not nearly so prosperous as before the annexation,
+they are doing fairly well. Some, indeed, are well off, possessing
+capital to the amount of several thousand pounds, whilst a millionaire,
+that is, the possessor of a million francs or forty thousand pounds, is
+found here and there. The severance from France entailed, however, one
+enormous loss on the farmer. This was the withdrawal of tobacco culture,
+a monopoly of the French State which afforded maximum profits to the
+cultivator. With regard to the indebtedness of the peasant-owner, my
+informant said that it certainly existed, but not to any great extent,
+usury having been prohibited by the local Reichstag a few years before.
+Again I found myself among French surroundings, French traditions,
+French speech. Let me add, however, that I heard none of the passionate
+regrets, recriminations, and wishes that had constantly fallen on my
+ears ten years before. One prayer, and one only, seems in every heart,
+on every lip, "Peace, peace--only let us have peace!" It must be borne
+in mind that 20,000 French Alsatians quitted Strasburg alone, and that
+those of the better classes who were unable to emigrate sent their young
+sons across the frontier before the age of seventeen. Thus, by a gradual
+process, the French element is being eliminated from the towns, whilst
+in the country annexation came in a very different guise.
+
+This will be seen from the account of another excursion made with French
+friends living in Strasburg.
+
+It is a beautiful drive to Blaesheim, southwest of the city, in a direct
+line with the Vosges and Oberlin's country. We pass the enormous public
+slaughterhouses and interminable lines of brand-new barracks, then under
+one of the twelve stone gates with double portals that now protect the
+city, leaving behind us the tremendous earthworks and powder magazines,
+and are soon in the open plain. This vast plain is fertile and well
+cultivated. On either side we see narrow, ribbon-like strips of maize,
+potatoes, clover, hops, beetroot, and hemp. There are no apparent
+boundaries of the various properties and no trees or houses to break
+the uniformity. The farm-houses and premises, as in the Pyrenees, are
+grouped together, forming the prettiest, neatest villages imaginable.
+Entzheim is one of these. The broad, clean street, the large
+white-washed timber houses, with projecting porches and roofs, may stand
+for a type of the Alsatian "Dorf." The houses are white-washed outside
+once a year, the mahogany-coloured rafters, placed crosswise, forming
+effective ornamentation. No manure heaps before the door are seen
+here, as in Brittany, all is clean and sightly. We meet numbers of
+pedestrians, the women mostly wearing the Alsatian head-dress, an
+enormous bow of broad black ribbon with long ends, worn fan-like on
+the head, and lending an air of great severity. The remainder of the
+costume--short blue or red skirt (the colours distinguishing Protestant
+and Catholic), gay kerchief, and apron--have all but vanished. As
+we approach our destination the outlines of the Vosges become more
+distinct, and the plain is broken by sloping vineyards and fir woods.
+We see no labourers afield, and, with one exception, no cattle. It is
+strange how often cattle are cooped up in pastoral regions. The farming
+here is on the old plan, and milch cows are stabled from January to
+December, only being taken out to water. Agricultural machinery and new
+methods are penetrating these villages at a snail's pace. The division
+of property is excessive. There are no lease-holds, and every farmer,
+alike on a small or large scale, is an owner.
+
+Two classes in Alsace have been partly won over to the German rule; one
+is that of the Protestant clergy, the other that of the peasants.
+
+The Third Empire persistently snubbed its Protestant subjects, then,
+as at the time of the Revocation, numbering many most distinguished
+citizens. No attempts, moreover, were made to Gallicise the
+German-speaking population of the Rhine provinces. Thus the wrench was
+much less felt here than in Catholic, French-speaking Lorraine. Higher
+stipends, good dwelling-houses and schools, have done much to soften
+annexation to the clergy. An afternoon "at home" in a country parsonage
+a few miles from Strasburg, reminded me of similar functions in an
+English rectory.
+
+At the parsonage of Blaesheim we were warmly welcomed by friends, and
+in their pretty garden found a group of ladies and gentlemen playing at
+croquet, among them two nice-looking girls wearing the Alsatian _coiffe_
+that enormous construction of black ribbon just mentioned. These young
+ladies were daughters of the village mayor, a rich peasant, and had been
+educated in Switzerland, speaking French correctly and fluently. Many
+daughters of wealthy peasants marry civilians at Strasburg, when they
+for once and for all cast off the last feature of traditional costume.
+After a little chat, and being bidden to return to tea in half an hour,
+we visited some other old acquaintances of my friends, a worthy peasant
+family residing close by. Here also a surprise was in store for me. The
+head of the house and his wife--both far advanced in the sixties and
+who might have walked out of one of Erckman-Chatrian's novels--could not
+speak a word of French, although throughout the best part of their lives
+they had been French subjects!
+
+Admirable types they were, but by no means given to sentiment or
+romance. The good man assured me in his quaint patois that he did not
+mind whether he was French, German, or, for the matter of that, English,
+so long as he could get along comfortably and peacefully! He added,
+however, that under the former _rgime_ taxes had been much lower and
+farming much more profitable. The good folk brought out bread and wine,
+and we toasted each other in right hearty fashion. Over the sideboard
+of their clean, well-furnished sitting room hung a small photograph of
+William II. On our return to our first host we found a sumptuous five
+o'clock tea prepared for the ladies, whilst more solid refreshments
+awaited the gentlemen in the garden.
+
+Even in a remote corner of Alsace, memorialized by Germany's greatest
+poet, we find pathetic clinging to France.
+
+Everyone has read the story of Goethe and Frederika, how the great poet,
+then a student at the Strasburg University, was taken by a comrade to
+the simple parsonage of Sesenheim, how the artless daughter of the house
+with her sweet Alsatian songs, enchanted the brilliant youth, how he
+found himself, as he tells us in his autobiography, suddenly in the
+immortal family of the Vicar of Wakefield. "And here comes Moses too!"
+cried Goethe, as Frederika's brother appeared. That accidental visit has
+in turn immortalised Sesenheim. The place breathes of Frederika. It has
+become a shrine dedicated to pure, girlish love.
+
+A new line of railway takes us from Strasburg in about an hour over the
+flat, monotonous stretch of country, so slowly crossed by diligence in
+Goethe's time. The appearance of the city from this side--the French
+side--is truly awful: we see fortification after fortification, with
+vast powder magazines at intervals, on the outer earthworks bristling
+rows of cannon, beyond, several of the thirteen forts constructed since
+the war. The bright greenery of the turf covering these earthworks does
+not detract from their dreadful appearance. Past the vast workshops
+and stores of the railway station--a small town in itself--past market
+gardens, hop gardens, hayfields, beech-woods, all drenched with a
+week of rain, past old-world villages, the railway runs to Sesenheim,
+alongside the high road familiar to Goethe. We alight at the neat,
+clean, trim station (in the matter of cleanliness the new _regime_ bears
+the palm over the old), and take the flooded road to the village. An
+old, bent, wrinkled peasant woman, speaking French, directs us for full
+information about Frdrique--thus is the name written in French--to the
+auberge. First, with no little interest and pride, she unhooks from
+her own wall a framed picture, containing portraits of Goethe, and
+Frederika, and drawings of church and parsonage as they were. The former
+has been restored and the latter wholly rebuilt.
+
+As we make our way to the little inn over against these, we pass a
+new handsome communal school in course of erection. On questioning two
+children in French, they shake their heads and pass on. The thought
+naturally arises--did the various French Governments, throughout the
+period of a hundred and odd years ending in 1870, do much in the way of
+assimilating the German population of Alsace?
+
+It would not seem so, seeing that up till the Franco-Prussian war the
+country folk retained their German speech, or at least patois. Under
+the present rule only German is taught in communal schools, and in
+the gymnasiums or lyces, two hours a week only being allowed for the
+teaching of French. At the Auberge du Bouf, over against the church and
+parsonage, we chat with the master in French about Goethe and Frederika;
+his womankind, however, only spoke patois. Here, nevertheless, we find
+French hearts, French sympathies, and occasionally French gaiety.
+
+Unidyllic, yet full of instruction, is the drive in the opposite
+direction to Kehl. We are here approaching friendly frontiers, yet the
+aspect is hardly less dreadful. True that cannon do not bristle on the
+outer line of the triple fortifications; otherwise the state of things
+is similar. We see lines of vast powder magazines, enormous barracks
+of recent construction, preparations for defence, on a scale altogether
+inconceivable and indescribable. Little wonder that meat is a shilling
+a pound, instead of fourpence as before the annexation, that bread has
+doubled in price, taxation also, and, to make matters worse, that trade
+has remained persistently dull!
+
+A tremendous triple-arched, stone gate, guarded by sentinels, has been
+erected on this side of the lower Rhine, over against the Duchy of
+Baden. No sooner are we through than our hearts are rejoiced with signs
+of peace and innocent enjoyment, restaurants and coffee gardens, family
+groups resting under the trees. Beyond, flowing briskly amid wooded
+banks to right and left, is the Rhine, a glorious sight, compensating
+for so many that have just given us the heartache.
+
+Of Strasburg I will say little. Full descriptions of the new city, for
+such an expression is no figure of speech, are given in the English,
+French, and German guide books. The first care of the German Government
+after coming into possession was to repair the havoc caused by the
+bombardment, the rebuilding of public buildings, monuments and streets
+that had been partially or entirely destroyed in 1871. Among these were
+the Museum and Public Library, the Protestant church, several orphanages
+and hospitals, lastly, incredible as it may seem, the beautiful
+octagonal tower of the Cathedral. The incidents of this vandalism have
+just been graphically described in the new volume of the brothers'
+Margueritte prose epic, dealing with the Franco-Prussian War, entitled
+"Les Braves Gens."
+
+I remember writing on the occasion of my first visit to Strasburg, a few
+years after these events--"There is very little to see at Strasburg now.
+The Library with its priceless treasures of books and manuscripts, the
+Museum of painting and sculpture, rich in _chefs d'oeuvre_ of the French
+school, the handsome Protestant church, the theatre, the Palais de
+Justice, were all completely destroyed by the Prussian bombardment,
+not to speak of buildings of lesser importance, four hundred private
+dwellings, and hundreds of civilians killed and wounded by the shells.
+Nor was the cathedral spared, and would doubtless have perished
+altogether also but for the enforced surrender of the heroic city."
+
+Since that sad time a new Strasburg has sprung up, of which the
+University is the central feature. A thousand students now frequent this
+great school of learning, the professorial staff numbering a hundred.
+One noteworthy point is the excessive cheapness of a learned or
+scientific education. Autocratic Prussia emulates democratic France.
+I was assured by an Alsatian who had graduated here that a year's fees
+need not exceed ten pounds! Students board and lodge themselves outside
+the University, and, of course, as economically as they please. They
+consist chiefly of Germans, for sons of French parents of the middle and
+upper ranks are sent over the frontier before the age of seventeen in
+order to evade the German military service. They thus exile themselves
+for ever. This cruel severance of family ties is, as I have said, one
+of the saddest effects of annexation. Without and within, the group
+of buildings forming the University is of great splendour. Alike
+architecture and decoration are on a costly scale; the vast corridors
+with tesselated marble floors, marble columns, domes covered with
+frescoes, statuary, stained glass, and gilded panels, must impress the
+mind of the poorer students. Less agreeable is the reflection of the
+taxpayer. This new Imperial quarter represents millions of marks, whilst
+the defences of Strasburg alone represent many millions more. One of
+the five facults is devoted to Natural Science. The Museum of Natural
+History, the mineralogical collections, and the chemical laboratories
+have each their separate building, whilst at the extreme end of the
+University gardens is the handsome new observatory, with covered way
+leading to the equally handsome residence of the astronomer in charge.
+Thus the learned star-gazer can reach his telescope under cover in
+wintry weather. In addition to the University library described above,
+the various class-rooms have each small separate libraries, sections
+of history, literature, etc., on which the students can immediately lay
+their hands. All the buildings are heated with gas or water.
+
+Just beyond these precincts we come upon a striking contrast--row after
+row of brand-new barracks, military bakeries, foundries, and stores;
+piles of cannon balls, powder magazines, war material, one would
+think, sufficient to blow up all Europe. Incongruous indeed is
+this juxtaposition of a noble seat of learning and militarism only
+commensurate with barbaric times. A good way off is the School of
+Medicine. This, indeed, owes little or nothing to the new rgime, having
+been founded by the French Government long before 1870. It is a vast
+group of buildings, one of which can only be glanced at with a shudder.
+My friend pointed out to me an annexe or "vivisection department." Here,
+as he expressed it, is maintained quite a menagerie of unhappy animals
+destined for the tortures of the vivisector's knife. The very thought
+sickened me, and I was glad to give up sight-seeing and drop in for
+half-an-hour's chat with a charming old lady, French to the backbone,
+living under the mighty shadow of the Cathedral. She entertained me with
+her experiences during the bombardment, when cooped up with a hundred
+persons, rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, all passing fifteen days in a
+dark, damp cellar. Many horrible stories she related, but somehow
+they seemed less horrible than the thought of tame, timid, and even
+affectionate and intelligent creatures, slowly and deliberately tortured
+to death, for the sake, forsooth, of what? Of this corporeal frame
+man himself has done his best to vitiate and dishonour, mere clayey
+envelope--so theologians tell us--of an immortal soul!
+
+Strasburg, like Metz, is one vast camp, at the time of this second
+visit the forty thousand soldiers in garrison here were away for the
+manoeuvres. In another week or two the town would swarm with them.
+
+I will now say a few words about the administration of the annexed
+provinces, a subject on which exists much misapprehension.
+
+As I have explained, no liberty, as we understand it, exists for the
+French subjects of the German Emperor, neither freedom of speech, nor of
+the press, nor of public meeting are enjoyed in Alsace and the portion
+of Lorraine no longer French. A rigorous censorship of books as well
+as newspapers is carried on. Even religious worship is under perpetual
+surveillance. One by one French pastors and priests are supplanted
+by their German brethren. A much respected pastor of Mulhouse, long
+resident in that city and ardently French, told me some years ago that
+he expected to be the last of his countrymen permitted to officiate.
+Police officers wearing plain clothes attend the churches in which
+French is still permitted on Sunday. There is nothing that can be called
+representative or real parliamentary government. The Stadtholder or
+Governor is in reality a dictator armed with autocratic powers. He
+can, at a moment's notice, expel citizens, or stop newspapers. As to
+administration, it rests in the hands of the State Secretariat or body
+of Ministers, three in number. There is a pretence at home rule, but
+one fact suffices to explain its character and working. Of the thirty
+members forming the local Reichstag, sitting at Strasburg, fifteen are
+always named by the Stadtholder himself. This little Chamber of Deputies
+deliberates upon provincial affairs, all Bills having to pass the
+Chamber at Berlin and receive the Imperial sanction before becoming law.
+As to the party of protest in the Reichstag itself, formerly headed by
+the late Jean Dollfuss, I was assured that it had ceased to exist.
+Years before, then burdened with the weight of care and years, the great
+patriot of Mulhouse had said to me, "I no longer take my seat at Berlin.
+Of what good?" And were he living still, that great and good man,
+burning as was his patriotism, inextinguishable as was his love for
+France, would doubtless echo the words I now heard on every lip, "Peace,
+peace; only let us have peace!"
+
+Whilst at Strasburg German has crowded out French, at Mulhouse I found
+French still universally spoken. The prohibition of native speech in
+schools is not only a domestic but a commercial grievance. As extensive
+business relations exist between the two countries, especially near the
+frontier, a knowledge of both French and German is really necessary
+to all classes. Even tourists in Alsace-Lorraine nowadays fare badly
+without some smattering of the latter language. Hotel-keepers especially
+look to the winning side, and do their very utmost to Germanise their
+establishments. Shopkeepers must live, and find it not only advantageous
+but necessary to follow the same course. Sad indeed is the spectacle
+of Germanised France! Nemesis here faces us in militarism, crushing
+the people with taxation and profoundly shocking the best instincts of
+humanity.
+
+In conclusion I must do justice to the extreme courtesy of German
+railway and other officials. Many employs of railways and post
+offices--all, be it remembered, Government officials--do not speak any
+French at all, especially in out-of-the-way places. At the same time,
+all officials, down to the rural postman, will do their very best to
+help out French-speaking strangers with their own scant vocabulary of
+French words.
+
+My Alsatian hosts, one and all, I found quite ready to do justice to
+the authorities and their representatives, but, as I have insisted
+upon before, an insuperable barrier, the fathomless gulf created by
+injustice, exists between conquerors and conquered. And only last year
+dining with my hosts of Germanised Lorraine in Paris, I asked them if in
+this respect matters had changed for the better. The answer I received
+was categoric--"Nothing is changed since your visit to us. French and
+Germans remain apart as before."
+
+"East of Paris" has led me somewhat farther than I intended, but to
+a lover of France, no less than to a French heart, France beyond the
+Vosges is France still!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ East of Paris, by Miss Betham-edwards
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ .side { float: right; font-size: 75%; width: 25%; padding-left: 0.8em;
+ border-left: dashed thin; margin-left: 0.8em; text-align: left;
+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: East of Paris
+ Sketches in the Gâtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne
+
+Author: Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8734]
+This file was first posted on August 5, 2003
+Last Updated: November 1, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST OF PARIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Carlo Traverso, Debra Storr, Sandra Brown,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ EAST OF PARIS
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ SKETCHES IN THE GÂTINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Miss Betham-Edwards
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> INTRODUCTORY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> EAST OF PARIS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. &mdash; MELUN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. &mdash; MORET-SUR-LOING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. &mdash; BOURRON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued</i>.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued.</i>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. &mdash; LARCHANT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. &mdash; RECLOSES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; NEMOURS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. &mdash; LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. &mdash; POUGUES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. &mdash; NEVERS AND MOULINS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. &mdash; SOUVIGNY AND SENS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. &mdash; RHEIMS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; RHEIMS&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; ST. JEAN DE LOSNE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; NANCY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. &mdash; IN GERMANISED LORRAINE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; IN GERMANISED ALSACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTORY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern
+ France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French
+ travel, no more than the <i>chefs-d&rsquo;oeuvre</i> of French literature, are
+ unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing
+ the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of
+ Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as a
+ wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their
+ seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from &ldquo;Notre Dame de
+ Paris&rdquo; or &ldquo;Le Père Goriot,&rdquo; to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so the
+ sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of
+ Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after
+ the thundering Rhône. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes as
+ we pic-nic on the Puy de Dôme. More fondly still my memory clings to many
+ a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its vine-clad
+ hills or of Autun as approached from Pré Charmoy, to me, the so familiar
+ home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however, the natural marvels
+ of France, like those of any other country, can be catalogued, French
+ scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so, having visited,
+ re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon on the European
+ map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a veritable <i>embarras
+ de richesses</i>. And many of the spots here described will, I have no
+ doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to myself&mdash;<i>Larchant</i>
+ with its noble tower rising from the plain, recalling the still nobler
+ ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the Sahara&mdash;<i>Recloses</i> with
+ its pictorial interiors and grand promontory overlooking a panorama of
+ forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked by a single sail&mdash;<i>Moret</i>
+ with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows which of the two being the more
+ attractive&mdash;<i>Nemours</i>, favourite haunt of Balzac, memoralized in
+ &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo;&mdash;<i>La Charité</i>, from whose old-world dwellings
+ you may throw pebbles into the broad blue Loire&mdash;<i>Pougues</i>, the
+ prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented by Mme. de Sévigné and
+ valetudinarians of the Valois race generations before her time&mdash;<i>Souvigny</i>,
+ cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast congeries of abbatial ruins&mdash;<i>Arcis-sur-Aube</i>,
+ the sweet riverside home of Danton&mdash;its near neighbour, <i>Bar-sur-Aube</i>,
+ connected with a bitterer enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great
+ revolutionary himself, the infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace.
+ These are a few of the sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I
+ have returned again and again, ever finding &ldquo;harbour and good company.&rdquo;
+ And these journeys, I should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once
+ more to that sad yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French,
+ to hearts as devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed
+ provinces twenty years ago!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ EAST OF PARIS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. &mdash; MELUN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Scores upon scores of times had I steamed past Melun in the Dijon express,
+ ever eyeing the place wistfully, ever too hurried, perhaps too lazy, to
+ make a halt. Not until September last did I carry out a long cherished
+ intention. It is unpardonable to pass and re-pass any French town without
+ alighting for at least an hour&rsquo;s stroll!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melun, capital of the ancient Gatinais, now chef-lieu of the Department of
+ Seine and Marne, well deserves a visit. Pretty as Melun looks from the
+ railway it is prettier still on nearer approach. The Seine here makes a
+ loop, twice curling round the town with loving embrace, its walls and old
+ world houses to-day mirrored in the crystal-clear river. Like every other
+ French town, small or great, Melun possesses its outer ring of shady
+ walks, boulevards lying beyond the river-side quarters. The place has a
+ busy, prosperous, almost metropolitan look, after the village just left.
+ {Footnote: For symmetry&rsquo;s sake I begin these records at Melun, although I
+ halted at the place on my way from my third sojourn at Bourron.} The big,
+ bustling Hotel du Grand Monarque too, with its brisk, obliging landlady,
+ invited a stay. Dr. Johnson, perhaps the wittiest if the completest John
+ Bull who ever lived, was not far wrong when he glorified the inn. &ldquo;Nothing
+ contrived by man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;has produced so much happiness (relaxation
+ were surely the better word?) as a good tavern.&rdquo; Do we not all, to quote
+ Falstaff, &ldquo;take our ease at our inn,&rdquo; under its roof throwing off daily
+ cares, assuming a holiday mood?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A survey of the yard awoke another train of reflections. It really seems
+ as if the invention of the motor car were bringing back ante-railway days
+ for the tourist and the travelling world, recalling family coach and
+ post-chaise. The place was crowded with motor cars of all shapes and
+ sizes, some of these were plain, shabby gigs and carts of commercial
+ travellers, others, landaus, waggonettes and victorias of rich folks
+ seeing the world in their own carriage as their ancestors had done
+ generations before; one turn-out suggested royalty or a Rothschild, I was
+ about to say, rather I should name a Chicago store-keeper, since American
+ millionaires are the Haroun-el-Raschids of the twentieth century. This
+ last was a sumptuously fitted up carriage having a seat behind for
+ servants, accommodating eight persons in all. There was also a huge box
+ for luggage. It would be interesting to know how much petroleum,
+ electricity, or alcohol such a vehicle would consume in a day. The
+ manufacture of motor cars must be a very flourishing business in France,
+ next, I should say, to that of bicycles. Of these also there was a goodly
+ supply in the entrance hall of the inn, and the impetus given to travel by
+ both motor car and bicycle was here self-evident. The Hotel du Grand
+ Monarque literally swarmed with tourists, one and all French folks taking
+ their ease at their inn. And our neighbours do not take their pleasure
+ solemnly after the manner of the less impressionable English. Stay-at-home
+ as they have hitherto been, home-loving as they essentially are, the
+ atmosphere of an inn, the aroma of a holiday, fill the Frenchman&rsquo;s cup of
+ hilarity to overflowing, rendering gayer the gayest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invention and rapidly spreading use of the motor car in France shows
+ the French character under its revolutionary aspect, yet no people on the
+ face of the earth are in many respects so conservative. We English folks
+ want a new &ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; for social purposes every year, the majority of
+ our friends and acquaintances changing their houses almost as often as
+ milliners and tailors change the fashion in bonnets and coats. A single
+ address book for France supplies a life-time. The explanation is obvious.
+ For the most part we live in other folks&rsquo; houses whilst French folks, the
+ military and official world excepted, occupy their own. Revisit provincial
+ gentry or well-to-do bourgeoisie after an interval of a quarter of a
+ century, you always find them where they were. Interiors show no more
+ change than the pyramids of Egypt. Not so much as sixpence has been laid
+ out upon new carpets or curtains. Could grandsires and granddames return
+ to life like the Sleeping Beauty, they would find that the world had stood
+ still during their slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melun possesses perhaps one of the few statues that may not be called
+ superfluous, and I confess I had been attracted thither rather by memories
+ of its greatest son than by its picturesque scenery and fine old churches.
+ The first translator of Plutarch into his native tongue was born here, and
+ as we should expect, has been worthily commemorated by his fellow
+ citizens. A most charming statue of Amyot stands in front of the grey,
+ turreted Hôtel de Ville. In sixteenth century doctoral dress, loose
+ flowing robes and square flat cap, sits the great scholiast, as intently
+ absorbed in his book as St. Jerome in the exquisite canvas of our own
+ National Gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the Hôtel de Ville an opening shows a small, beautifully kept
+ flower garden, just now a blaze of petunias, zinnias, and a second crop of
+ roses. Long I lingered before this noble monument, one only of the many
+ raised to Amyot&rsquo;s memory, of whom Montaigne wrote:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ignoramuses that we are, we should all have been lost, had not this book
+ (the translation of Plutarch) dragged us out of the mire; thanks to it, we
+ now venture to write and to discourse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And musing on the scholar and his kindred, a favourite line of Browning&rsquo;s
+ came into my mind&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man decided not to live but to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed the whole of &ldquo;A Grammarian&rsquo;s Funeral&rdquo; were here appropriate. Is it
+ not men after this type of whom we feel
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Our low life was the level&rsquo;s and the night&rsquo;s.
+ He&rsquo;s for the morning&rdquo;?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To my surprise I found the church of St. Aspais locked. A courteous
+ hair-dresser thereupon told me that all churches in Melun were closed from
+ noon till half past one, but that, as noon had only just struck, if I were
+ brisk I might possibly catch the sacristan. After a pretty hot chase I
+ succeeded in finding a deaf, decrepit, dingy old man who showed me round
+ the church, although evidently very impatient for his mid-day meal. He
+ informed me that this closing of churches at Melun had been necessitated
+ of late years by a series of robberies. From twelve till half past one
+ o&rsquo;clock no worshippers are present as a rule, hence the thieves&rsquo;
+ opportunity. Unfortunately marauders do not strip beautiful interiors of
+ the tinselly gew-gaws that so often deface them; in this respect, however,
+ St. Aspais being comparatively an exception. Alike within and without the
+ proportions are magnificent, and the old stained glass is not marred by
+ modern crudities. I do not here by any means exhaust the sights of this
+ ancient town, from which, by the way, Barbizon is now reached in twenty
+ minutes, an electric tramway plying regularly between Melun and that
+ famous art pilgrimage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; MORET-SUR-LOING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The valley of the Loing abounds in captivating spots, Moret-sur-Loing
+ bearing the palm. Over the ancient town, bird-like broods a majestic
+ church, as out-spread wings its wide expanse of roof, while below by
+ translucent depths and foliage richly varied, stretch quarters old and
+ new, the canal intersecting the river at right angles. Lovely as is the
+ river on which all who choose may spend long summer days, the canal to my
+ thinking is lovelier still. Straight as an arrow it saunters between
+ avenues of poplar, the lights and shadows of wood and water, the sunburnt,
+ stalwart barge folk, their huge gondoliers affording endless pictures.
+ Hard as is undoubtedly the life of the rope tower, rude as may appear this
+ amphibious existence, there are cheerful sides to the picture. Many of
+ these floating habitations possess a fireside nook cosy as that of a
+ Parisian concierge, I was never tired of strolling along the canal and
+ watching the barge folk. One day a friend and myself found a large barge
+ laden with coal at the head of the canal, the huge dark framework and its
+ sombre burden lighted up with touches of grace and colour. At the farther
+ end of the vessel was hung a cage of canaries, at the other end was a
+ stand of pot-flowers, geraniums and petunias in full bloom and all the
+ more brilliant by virtue of contrast. A neighbour of the bargeman, a
+ bright, intelligent woman, brown as a gipsy but well-spoken and of tidy
+ appearance, invited us to enter. Imagine the neatest, prettiest little
+ room in the world, parlour, bedchamber and kitchen in one, every object so
+ placed as to make the most of available space. On a small side-table&mdash;and
+ of course under such circumstances each article must be sizable&mdash;stood
+ a sewing machine, in the corner was a bedstead with exquisitely clean
+ bedding, in another a tiny cooking stove. Vases of flowers, framed
+ pictures and ornamental quicksilver balls had been found place for, this
+ bargewoman&rsquo;s home aptly illustrating Shakespeare&rsquo;s adage&mdash;&ldquo;Order
+ gives all things view.&rdquo; The brisk, weather-beaten mistress now came up, no
+ little gratified by our interest and our praises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ladies would perhaps like to make a little journey with me?&rdquo; she
+ asked, &ldquo;nothing easier, we start to-morrow morning at six o&rsquo;clock for
+ Nevers, you could take the train back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never perhaps in our lives had myself and my companion received an
+ invitation so out of the way, so bewilderingly tempting! And we felt too,
+ with a pang, that never again in all probability should we receive such
+ another. But on this especial day we were not staying at Moret, only
+ running over for the afternoon from our headquarters at Bourron.
+ Acceptance was thus hemmed round with small impediments. And by way of
+ consolation, next morning the glorious weather broke. A downpour recalling
+ our own lakeland would anyhow have kept us ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Another time then!&rdquo; had said the kind hostess of the barge at parting.
+ She seemed as sorry as ourselves that the little project she had mooted so
+ cordially could not be carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Loing canal joins the Seine at Saint Mammes, a few kilomètres lower
+ down, continuing its course of thirty kilomètres to Bleneau in the Nièvre.
+ Canal life in Eastern France is a characteristic feature, the whole region
+ being intersected by a network of waterways, those <i>chemins qui marchent</i>,
+ or walking roads as Michelet picturesquely calls them. And strolling on
+ the banks of the canal here you may be startled by an astonishing sight,
+ you see folks walking, or apparently walking, on water. Standing bolt
+ upright on a tiny raft, carefully maintaining their balance, country
+ people are towed from one side to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These suburban and riverside quarters are full of charm. The soft reds and
+ browns of the houses, the old-world architecture and romantic sites, tempt
+ an artist at every turn. And all in love with a Venetian existence may
+ here find it nearer home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few villas let furnished during the summer months have little lawns
+ winding down to the water&rsquo;s edge and a boat moored alongside. Thus their
+ happy inmates can spend hot, lazy days on the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning our backs on the canal, by way of ivy-mantled walls, ancient mills
+ and tumbledown houses, we reach the Porte du Pont or Gate of the Bridge.
+ With other towns of the period, Moret was fortified. The girdle of walls
+ is broken and dilapidated, whilst firm as when erected in the fourteenth
+ century still stand the city gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the two the Porte du Pont is the least imposing and ornamental, but it
+ possesses a horrifying interest. In an upper storey is preserved one of
+ those man-cages said to have been invented for the gratification of Louis
+ XI, that strange tyrant to whose ears were equally acceptable the shrieks
+ of his tortured victims and the apt repartee of ready-witted subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much do you earn a day?&rdquo; he once asked a little scullion, as
+ incognito he entered the royal kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By God&rsquo;s grace as much as the King,&rdquo; replied the lad; &ldquo;I earn my bread
+ and he can do no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So pleased was the King with this saying that it made the speaker&rsquo;s
+ fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We climb two flights of dark, narrow stone stairs reaching a bare chamber
+ having small apertures, enlargements of the mere slits formerly admitting
+ light and air. The man-cage occupies one corner. It is made of stout oaken
+ ribs strongly bound together with iron, its proportions just allowing the
+ captive to lie down at full length and take a turn of two or three steps.
+ De Commines tells us that the cage invented by Cardinal Balue, and in
+ which he languished for eleven years, was narrower still. An average sized
+ man could not stand therein upright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bolts and bars are still in perfect order. Nothing more brings home to
+ us the abomination of the whole thing than to see the official draw these
+ Brobdingnagian bolts and turn these gigantic keys. The locksmith&rsquo;s art was
+ but too well understood in those days. By whom and for whom this living
+ tomb was made or brought hither local records do not say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a stage higher up a magnificent panorama is obtained, Moret, old and
+ new, set round with the green and the blue, its greenery and bright river,
+ far away its noble aqueduct, further still looking eastward the valley of
+ the Loing spread out as a map, the dark ramparts of Fontainebleau forest
+ half framing the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town itself is a trifle unsavoury and unswept. Municipal authorities
+ seem particularly stingy in the matter of brooms, brushes and water-carts.
+ Such little disagreeables must not prevent the traveller from exploring
+ every corner. But the real, the primary attraction of Moret lies less in
+ its historic monuments and antiquated streets than in its <i>chemins qui
+ marchent</i>, its ever reposeful water-ways. Like most French towns Moret
+ is linked with English history. Its fine old church was consecrated by
+ Thomas à-Becket in 1166. Three hundred years later the town was taken by
+ Henry V., and re-taken by Charles VII. a decade after. Not long since five
+ hundred skulls supposed to have been those of English prisoners were
+ unearthed here; as they were all found massed together, the theory is that
+ the entire number had surrendered and been summarily decapitated, methods
+ of warfare that have apparently found advocates in our own day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most visitors to Paris will have had pointed out to them the so-called
+ &ldquo;Maison François Premier&rdquo; on the Cour La Reine. This richly ornate and
+ graceful specimen of Renaissance architecture formerly stood at Moret, and
+ bit by bit was removed to the capital in 1820. A spiral stone staircase
+ and several fragments of heraldic sculpture were left behind. Badly placed
+ as the house was here, it seems a thousand pities that Moret should have
+ thus been robbed of an architectural gem Paris could well have spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first stay at Moret three years ago lasted several weeks. I had joined
+ friends occupying a pretty little furnished house belonging to the
+ officiating Mayor. We lived after simplest fashion but to our hearts&rsquo;
+ content. One of those indescribably obliging women of all work, came every
+ day to cook, clean and wait on us. Most of our meals were taken among our
+ flower beds and raspberry bushes. The only drawback to enjoyment may at
+ first sight appear unworthy of mention, but it was not so. We had no
+ latchkey. Now as every-one of all work knows, they are constantly popping
+ in and out of doors, one moment they are off to market, the next to warm
+ up their husbands&rsquo; soup, and so on and so on. As for ourselves, were we
+ not at Moret on purpose to be perpetually running about also? Thus it
+ happened that somebody or other was always being locked out or locked in;
+ either Monsieur finding the household abroad had pocketed the key and
+ instead of returning in ten minutes&rsquo; time had lighted upon a subject he
+ must absolutely sketch then and there; or Madame could not get through her
+ shopping as expeditiously as she had hoped; or their guest returned from
+ her walk long before she was due; what with one miscalculation and
+ another, now one of us had to knock at a neighbour&rsquo;s door, now another
+ effected an entrance by means of a ladder, and now the key would be wholly
+ missing and for the time being we were roofless, as if burnt out of house
+ and home. Sometimes we were locked in, sometimes we were locked out, a
+ current &ldquo;Open Sesame&rdquo; we never had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no &ldquo;regrettable incidents&rdquo; marred a delightful holiday. Imbroglios
+ such as these only leave memories to smile at, and add zest to
+ recollection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; BOURRON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two years ago some Anglo-French friends joyfully announced their
+ acquisition of a delightful little property adjoining Fontainebleau
+ forest. &ldquo;Come and see for yourself,&rdquo; they wrote, &ldquo;we are sure that you
+ will be charmed with our purchase!&rdquo; A little later I journeyed to Bourron,
+ half an hour from Moret on the Bourbonnais line, on arriving hardly less
+ disconcerted than Mrs. Primrose by the gross of green spectacles. No trim,
+ green verandahed villa, no inviting vine-trellised walk, no luxuriant
+ vegetable garden or brilliant flower beds greeted my eyes; instead,
+ dilapidated walls, abutting on these a peasant&rsquo;s cottage, and in front an
+ acre or two of bare dusty field! My friends had indeed become the owners
+ of a dismantled bakery and its appurtenances, to the uninitiated as
+ unpromising a domain as could well be imagined. But I discovered that the
+ purchasers were wiser in their generation than myself. Noticing my
+ crestfallen look they had said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only wait till next year, and you will see what a bargain we have made.
+ You will find us admirably housed and feasting on peaches and grapes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True enough, twelve months later, I found a wonderful transformation. That
+ a substantial dwelling now occupied the site of the dismantled bakery was
+ no matter for surprise, the change out of doors seemed magical. Nothing
+ could have looked more unpromising than that stretch of field, a mere bit
+ of waste, your feet sinking into the sand as if you were crossing the
+ desert. Now, the longed-for <i>tonnelle</i> or vine-covered way offered
+ shade, petunias made a splendid show, choice roses scented the air, whilst
+ the fruit and vegetables would have done credit to a market-gardener.
+ Peaches and grapes ripened on the wall, big turnips and tomatoes brilliant
+ as vermilion took care of themselves. It was not only a case of the
+ wilderness made to blossom as the rose, but of the horn of plenty filled
+ to overflowing, prize flowers, fruit and vegetables everywhere. For the
+ soil hereabouts, if indeed soil it can be called, and the climate of
+ Bourron, possess very rare and specific qualities. On this light, dry
+ sand, or dust covering a substratum of rock, vegetation springs up all but
+ unbidden, and when once above ground literally takes care of itself. As to
+ climate, its excellence may be summed up in the epithet, anti-asthmatic.
+ Although we are on the very hem of forty thousand acres of forest, the
+ atmosphere is one of extraordinary dryness. Rain may fall in torrents
+ throughout an entire day. The sandy soil is so thorough an absorbent that
+ next morning the air will be as dry as usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This house reminded me of a tiny side door opening into some vast
+ cathedral. We cross the threshold and find ourselves at once in the
+ forest, in close proximity moreover to its least-known but not least
+ majestic sites. We may turn either to right or left, gradually climbing a
+ densely wooded headland. The first ascent lands us in an hour on the
+ Redoute de Bourron, the second, occupying only half the time, on a spur of
+ the forest offering a less famous but hardly less magnificent perspective,
+ nothing to mar the picture as a whole, sunny plain, winding river and
+ scattered townlings looking much as they must have done to Balzac when
+ passing through three-quarters of a century ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This eastern verge of the Fontainebleau forest is of especial beauty; the
+ frowning headlands seem set there as sentinels jealously guarding its
+ integrity, on the watch against human encroachments, defying time and
+ change and cataclysmal upheaval. Boldly stands out each wooded crag, the
+ one confronting the rising, the other the sinking sun, behind both massed
+ the world of forest, spread before them as a carpet, peaceful rural
+ scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must now describe a spot, the name of which will probably be new to all
+ excepting close students of Balzac. The great novelist loved the valley of
+ the Loing almost as fondly as his native Touraine; and if these pastoral
+ scenes did not inspire a <i>chef d&rsquo;oeuvre</i>, they have thereby immensely
+ gained in interest. &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët,&rdquo; of which I shall have more to say
+ further on, is not to be compared to such masterpieces as &ldquo;Eugénie
+ Grandet.&rdquo; But a leading incident of &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo; occurs at Bourron&mdash;a
+ sufficient reason for recalling the story here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beauty of our village, like the beauty of French women, to quote
+ Michelet, &ldquo;is made up of little nothings.&rdquo; There are a hundred and one
+ pretty things to see but very few to describe. Who could wish it
+ otherwise? Little nothings of an engaging kind better agree with us as
+ daily fare than the seven wonders of the world. With forty thousand acres
+ of forest at our doors we do not want M. Mattel&rsquo;s newly discovered
+ underground river within reach as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From our garden we yet look upon scenes not of every day. Those sweeps of
+ bluish-green foliage strikingly contrasted with the brilliant vine remind
+ us that we are in France, and in a region with most others having its
+ specialities. Asparagus, not literally but figuratively, nourishes the
+ entire population of Bourron. Everyone here is a market gardener on his
+ own account, and the cultivation of asparagus for the Paris markets is a
+ leading feature of local commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no more graceful foliage than that of this plant, and gratefully
+ the eye rests upon these waves of delicate green under a blazing,
+ grape-ripening sky. Making gold-green lines between are vines, a
+ succession of asparagus beds and vineyards separating our village from its
+ better known and more populous neighbour, Marlotte. In the opposite
+ direction we see brown-roofed, white-walled houses surmounted by a pretty
+ little spire. This is Bourron. To reach it we pass a double row of
+ homesteads, rustic interiors of small farmer or market gardener, the one,
+ as our French neighbours say, more picturesque than the other. Each, no
+ matter how ill kept, is set off by an ornamental border, zinnias,
+ begonias, roses and petunias as obviously showing signs of care and
+ science. Oddly enough the finest display of flowers often adorns the least
+ tidy premises. And oddly enough, rather perhaps as we should expect it, in
+ not one, but in every respect, this French village is the exact opposite
+ of its English counterpart. In England every tenant of a cottage pays
+ rent, there, not an inhabitant, however poor, but sits under his own vine
+ and his own fig-tree. In England the farm-house faces the road and the
+ premises lie behind. Here manure-heap, granary and pig styes open on the
+ highway, the dwellings being at the back. In England a man&rsquo;s home, called
+ his castle, is no more defended than the Bedouin&rsquo;s tent. Here at nightfall
+ the small peasant proprietor is as securely entrenched within walls as a
+ feudal baron in his moated château. In England ninety-nine householders
+ out of a hundred are perpetually changing their domicile. Here folks live
+ and die under the paternal roof that has sheltered generations. Nor does
+ diversity end with circumstances and surroundings. As will be seen in
+ another chapter, habits of life, modes of thought and standards of duty
+ show contrasts equally marked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bourron possesses twelve hundred and odd souls, most of whom are peasants
+ who make a living out of their small patrimony. Destined perhaps one day
+ to rival its neighbour Marlotte in popularity&mdash;even to become a
+ second Barbizon&mdash;it is as yet the sleepiest, most rustic retreat
+ imaginable. The climate would appear to be not only anti-asthmatic but
+ anti-everything in the shape of malady. Anyhow, if folks fall ill they
+ have to send elsewhere for a doctor. Minor complaints&mdash;cuts, bruises
+ and snake bites&mdash;are attended to by a Fontainebleau chemist. Every
+ day we hear the horn of his messenger who cycles through the village
+ calling for prescriptions and leaving drugs and draughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A post office, of course, Bourron possesses, but let no one imagine that a
+ post office in out of the way country places implies a supply of postage
+ stamps. English people are the greatest scribblers by post in the world,
+ whilst our wiser French neighbours appear to be the laziest. An amusing
+ dilemma had occurred here just before my arrival. One day my friends
+ applied to the post office for stamps, but none were to be had for love or
+ money. Off somebody cycled to Marlotte, which possesses not only a post
+ and telegraph, but a money order office as well&mdash;same reply, next the
+ adjoining village of Grez was visited and with no better result&mdash;&ldquo;Supplies
+ have not yet reached us from headquarters,&rdquo; said the third postmistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps instead of smiling contemptuously we should take a moral to heart.
+ The amount of time, money, eyesight and handcraft expended among ourselves
+ on letter writing so-called is simply appalling. Was it not Napoleon who
+ said that all letters if left unanswered for a month answered themselves?
+ Too many Englishwomen spend the greater portion of the day in what is no
+ longer a delicate art, but mere time-killing, after the manner of
+ patience, games of cards and similar pastimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bourron is a most orderly village; within its precincts liberty is not
+ allowed to degenerate into licence. As in summer-time folks are fond of
+ spending their evenings abroad, a municipal law has enforced quiet after
+ ten o&rsquo;clock. Thus precisely on the stroke of ten, alike café, garden,
+ private summer-house or doorstep are deserted, everyone betakes himself
+ indoors, leaving his neighbours to enjoy unbroken repose. A most salutary
+ by-law! Would it were put in force throughout the length and breadth of
+ France! At Chatouroux I have been kept awake all night by the gossip of a
+ <i>sergeant de ville</i> and a lounger close to my window. At Tours, La
+ Châtre and Bourges my fellow-traveller and myself could get no sleep on
+ account of street revellers, whilst at how many other places have not
+ holiday trips been spoiled by unquiet nights? All honour then to the
+ aediles of dear little Bourron!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued</i>.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Forty thousand acres of woodland at one&rsquo;s doors would seem a fact
+ sufficiently suggestive; to particularize the attractions of Bourron after
+ this statement were surely supererogation. Yet, for my own pleasure as
+ much as for the use of my readers, I must jot down one or two especially
+ persistent memories, impressions of solemnity, beauty and repose never to
+ be effaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it is only the cyclist who can realise such an immensity as the
+ Fontainebleau forest. From end to end these vast sweeps are now
+ intersected by splendid roads and by-roads. Old-fashioned folks, for whom
+ the horseless vehicle came too late, can but envy wheelmen and wheelwomen
+ as they skim through vista after vista, outstripping one&rsquo;s horse and
+ carriage as a greyhound outstrips a decrepit poodle. On the other hand
+ only inveterate loiterers, the Lazy Lawrences of travel, can appreciate
+ the subtler beauties of this woodland world. There are certain sights and
+ sounds not to be caught by hurried observers, evanescent aspects of
+ cloud-land and tree-land, rock and undergrowth, passing notes of bird and
+ insect, varied melodies, if we may so express it, of summer breeze and
+ autumn wind&mdash;in fine, a dozen experiences enjoyed one day, not
+ repeated on the next. The music of the forest is a quiet music and has to
+ be listened for, hardly on the cyclist&rsquo;s ear falls the song or rather
+ accompaniment of the grasshopper, &ldquo;the Muse of the wayside,&rdquo; a French poet
+ has so exquisitely apostrophized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One&rsquo;s forest companion should be of a taciturn and contemplative turn.
+ Only thus can we drink in the sense of such solitude and immensity;
+ realizing to the full what indeed these words may mean, he may wander for
+ hours without encountering a soul, very few birds are heard by the way,
+ but the hum of the insect world, that dreamy go-between, hardly silence,
+ hardly to be called noise, keeps us perpetual company, and our eyes must
+ ever be open for beautiful little living things. Now a green and gold
+ lizard flashes across a bit of grey rock, now a dragon-fly disports its
+ sapphire wings amid the yellowing ferns or purple ling, butterflies,
+ white, blue, and black and orange, flit hither and thither, whilst little
+ beetles, blue as enamel beads, enliven the mossy undergrowth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One pre-eminent charm indeed of the Fontainebleau forest is this wealth of
+ undergrowth, bushes, brambles and ferns making a second lesser thicket on
+ all sides. In sociable moods delightful it is to go a-blackberrying here.
+ I am almost tempted to say that if you want to realise the lusciousness of
+ a hedgerow dessert you must cater for yourself in these forty thousand
+ acres of blackberry orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the foremost, the crowning excellence of Fontainebleau forest consists
+ in its variety. France itself, the &ldquo;splendid hexagon,&rdquo; with its mountains,
+ rivers and plains, is hardly more varied than this vast area of rock and
+ woodland. We can choose between sites, savage or idyllic, pastoral or
+ grandiose, here finding a sunny glade, the very spot for a picnic, there
+ break-neck declivities and gloomy chasms. The magnificent ruggedness of
+ Alpine scenery is before our eyes, without the awfulness of snow-clad
+ peaks or the blinding dazzle of glacier. In more than one place we could
+ almost fancy that some mountain has been upheaved and split asunder, the
+ clefts formed by these gigantic fragments being now filled with veteran
+ trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The formation of the forest has puzzled geologists, to this day the origin
+ of its rocky substratum remaining undetermined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within half an hour&rsquo;s stroll of Bourron lies the so-called &ldquo;Mare aux Fées&rdquo;
+ or Fairies&rsquo; Mere, as sweet a spot to boil one&rsquo;s kettle in as holiday
+ makers can desire, at the same time affording the best possible
+ illustration of what I have just insisted upon. For this favourite resort
+ is in a certain sense microcosmic, giving in miniature those
+ characteristics for which the forest is remarkable. Smooth and sunny as a
+ garden plot is the open glade wherein we now halt for tea, and while the
+ kettle boils we have time for a most suggestive bird&rsquo;s eye view. It is a
+ little world that we survey from the borders of this rock-hemmed,
+ forest-girt lake, one perspective after another with varying gradations of
+ colour making us realize the many-featured, chequered area spread before
+ us. From this coign of vantage are discerned alike the sterner and the
+ more smiling beauties of the forest, rocky defiles, gloomy passes, sunlit
+ lawns and mossy dells, scenery varied in itself and yet varying again with
+ the passing hour and changing month. And such suggestion of almost
+ infinite variety is not gained only from the Fairies&rsquo; Mere. From a dozen
+ points, not the same view but the same kind of view may be obtained, each
+ differing from the other, except in charm and immensity. Within a walk of
+ home also stands one of the numerous monuments scattered throughout the
+ forest. The Croix de Saint Hérem, now a useful landmark for cyclists, has
+ a curious history. It was erected in 1666 by a certain Marquis de
+ Saint-Hérem, celebrated for his ugliness, and centuries later was the
+ scene of the most extraordinary rendezvous on record. Here, in 1804, every
+ detail having been theatrically arranged beforehand, took place the
+ so-called chance meeting of Napoleon and Pope Pius VII. The Emperor had
+ arranged a grand hunt for that day, and in hunting dress, his dogs at his
+ heels, awaited the pontiff by the cross of Saint Hérem. As the pair
+ lovingly embraced each other the Imperial horses ran away; this apparent
+ escapade formed part of the programme, and Napoleon stepped into the
+ Pope&rsquo;s carriage, seating himself on his visitor&rsquo;s, rather his prisoner&rsquo;s,
+ right. A few years later another rencontre not without historic irony took
+ place here. In 1816, Louis XVIII. received on this spot the future mother,
+ so it was hoped, of French Kings, the adventurous Caroline of Naples,
+ afterwards Duchesse de Berri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crosses monuments of the forest are usefully catalogued in local
+ guide-books, and many have historic associations. The most interesting of
+ these&mdash;readers will excuse the Irish bull&mdash;is a monument that
+ may be said never to have existed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great Polish patriot Kosciusko spent the last fifteen years of his
+ life in a hamlet near Nemours, and on his death the inhabitants of that
+ and neighbouring villages projected a double memorial, in other words, a
+ tiny chapel, the ruins of which are still seen near Episy, and a mound to
+ be added to every year and to be called &ldquo;La Montagne de Kosciusko,&rdquo; or
+ Kosciusko&rsquo;s mountain. Particulars of this generous and romantic scheme are
+ preserved in the archives of Montigny. The inauguration of the mound took
+ place on the ninth of October 1836. To the sound of martial music, drums
+ and cannon, the first layers of earth were deposited, men, women and
+ children taking part in the proceedings. A year later no less than ten
+ thousand French friends of Poland with mattock and spade added several
+ feet to Kosciusko&rsquo;s mountain. But the celebration got noised abroad.
+ Afraid of anti-Russian manifestations the government of Louis Philippe
+ prohibited any further Polish fêtes. Thus it came about that, as I have
+ said, the most interesting monument in the forest remains an idea. And all
+ things considered, neither French nor English admirers of the exiled hero
+ could to-day very well carve on the adjoining rock,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Some time or other the Russian Imperial pair may visit Fontainebleau,
+ whilst an English tourist with <i>The Daily Mail</i> in his pocket would
+ naturally and sheepishly look the other way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another half hour&rsquo;s stroll and we find ourselves in an atmosphere of art,
+ fashion and sociability. Only a mile either of woodland, field path or
+ high road separates Bourron from its more populous and highly popular
+ neighbour, Marlotte. Here every house has an artist&rsquo;s north window, the
+ road is alive with motor cars, you can even buy a newspaper! Marlotte
+ possesses a big, I should say comfortable, hotel, is very cosmopolitan and
+ very pretty. Anglo-French households here, as at Bourron, favour
+ Anglo-French relations. In Marlotte drawing-rooms we are in France, but
+ always with a pleasant reminder of England and of true English
+ hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I will now say something about my numerous acquaintances at Bourron. After
+ three summer holidays spent in this friendly little spot I can boast of a
+ pretty large visiting list, the kind of list requiring no cards or
+ ceremonious procedure. My hostess, a Frenchwoman, and myself used to drop
+ in for a chat with this neighbour and that whenever we passed their way,
+ always being cheerily welcomed and always pressed to stay a little longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French peasant is the most laborious, at the same time the most
+ leisurely, individual in the world. Urgent indeed must be those farming
+ operations that prevent him from enjoying a talk. Conversation,
+ interchange of ideas, give and take by word of mouth, are as necessary to
+ the Frenchman&rsquo;s well-being as oxygen to his lungs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man,&rdquo; writes Montesquieu, &ldquo;is described as a sociable animal.&rdquo; From this
+ point of view it appears to me that the Frenchman may be called more of a
+ man than others; he is first and foremost a man, since he seems especially
+ made for society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere the same great writer adds:&mdash;&ldquo;You may see in Paris
+ individuals who have enough to live upon for the rest of their days, yet
+ they labour so arduously as to shorten their days, in order, as they say,
+ to assure themselves of a livelihood.&rdquo; These two marked characteristics
+ are as true of the French peasant now-a-days as of the polite society
+ described in the &ldquo;Lettres Persanes.&rdquo; In the eighteenth century cultivated
+ people did little else but talk. Morning, noon and night, their
+ epigrammatic tongues were busy. Conversation in historic salons became a
+ fine art. There are no such literary côteries in our time. What with one
+ excitement and another, the Parisian world chats but has no time for real
+ conversation. Perhaps for <i>Gauloiseries</i>, true Gallic salt, we must
+ now go to the unlettered, the sons of the soil, whose ancestors were boors
+ when wit sparkled among their social superiors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are one or two types illustrating both characteristics, excellent
+ types in their way of the small peasant proprietor hereabouts, a class
+ having no counterpart or approximation to a counterpart in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first visit I describe was paid one evening to an old gardener whom I
+ will call the Père A&mdash;. Bent partly with toil, partly with age, you
+ would have at once supposed that his working days were well over,
+ especially on learning his circumstances, for sole owner he was of the
+ little domain to which he had now retired for the day. Of benevolent
+ aspect, shrewd, every inch alive despite infirmities, he received his
+ neighbour and her English guest with rustic but cordial urbanity, at once
+ entering into conversation. With evident pride and pleasure he watched my
+ glances at premises and garden, house and outbuildings ramshackle enough,
+ even poverty-stricken to look at, here not an indication of comfortable
+ circumstances much less of independent means; the bit of land half farm,
+ half garden, however, was fairly well kept and of course productive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, this dwelling is mine and the two hectares (four acres four hundred
+ and odd feet), aye,&rdquo; he added self-complacently, &ldquo;and I have a little
+ money besides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you live here all by yourself and still work for wages?&rdquo; I asked. His
+ reply was eminently characteristic. &ldquo;I work for my children.&rdquo; These
+ children he told me were two grown up sons, one of them being like himself
+ a gardener, both having work. Thus in order to hoard up a little more for
+ two able-bodied young men, here was a bent, aged man living penuriously
+ and alone, his only companion being a beautiful and evidently much petted
+ donkey. I ventured to express an English view of the matter, namely, the
+ undesirability of encouraging idleness and self-indulgence in one&rsquo;s
+ children by toiling and moiling for them in old age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He nodded his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, all that you say is true, but so it is with me. I must
+ work for my children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus blindly are brought about the parricidal tragedies that Zola, Guy
+ de Maupassant and other novelists have utilized in fiction, and with which
+ we are familiarized in French criminal reports&mdash;parents and
+ grandparents got rid of for the sake of their coveted hoardings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus also are generated in the rich and leisured classes that intense
+ selfishness of the rising generation so movingly portrayed in M. Hervieu&rsquo;s
+ play, &ldquo;La Course du Flambeau.&rdquo; No one who has witnessed Mme. Réjane&rsquo;s
+ presentment of the adoring, disillusioned mother can ever forget it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On leaving, the Père A&mdash;&mdash; presented us with grapes and pears,
+ carefully selecting the finest for his English visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gate I threw a Parthian dart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t work too hard,&rdquo; I said, whereupon came the burden of his song:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One must work for one&rsquo;s children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This good neighbour could neither read nor write, a quite exceptional case
+ in these days. Our second visit was made to a person similarly situated,
+ but belonging to a different order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame B&mdash;&mdash;, a widow, was also advanced in years and also lived
+ by herself on her little property, consisting of walled-in cottage and
+ outhouses, with straggling garden or rather orchard, garden and field in
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This good woman is what country folks in these parts call rich. I have no
+ doubt that an English farmeress in her circumstances would have the
+ neatest little parlour, a tidy maid to wait upon her, and most likely take
+ afternoon tea in a black silk gown. Our hostess here wore the dress of a
+ poor but respectable working woman. Her interior was almost as bare and
+ primitive as that of the Boer farmhouse in the Paris Exhibition. Although
+ between six and seven o&rsquo;clock, there was no sign whatever of preparation
+ for an evening meal. Indeed on every side things looked poverty-stricken.
+ Not a penny had evidently been spent upon kitchen or bedrooms for years
+ and years, the brick floor of both being bare, the furniture having done
+ duty for generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This &ldquo;rentière,&rdquo; or person living upon independent means, did not match
+ her sordid surroundings. Although toil-worn, tanned and wrinkled, her face
+ &ldquo;brown as the ribbed sea-sand,&rdquo; there was a certain refinement about look,
+ speech and manner, distinguishing her from the good man her neighbour.
+ After a little conversation I soon found out that she had literary tastes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Living alone and finding the winter evenings long I hire books from a
+ lending library at Fontainebleau,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I opened my eyes in amazement. Seldom indeed had I heard of a peasant
+ proprietor in France caring for books, much less spending money upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what do you read?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything I can get,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Madame&rsquo;s husband,&rdquo; here she looked
+ at my friend, &ldquo;has kindly lent me several.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among these I afterwards found had been Zola&rsquo;s &ldquo;Rome&rdquo; and &ldquo;Le Désastre&rdquo; by
+ the brothers Margueritte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the Père A&mdash;&mdash; she had married children and entertained
+ precisely the same notion of parental duty. The few sous spent upon such
+ beguilement of long winter nights were most likely economized by some
+ little deprivation. There is something extremely pathetic in this
+ patriarchal spirit, this uncompromising, ineradicable resolve to hand down
+ a little patrimony not only intact but enlarged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our peasants live too sordidly,&rdquo; observed a Frenchman to me a day or two
+ later. &ldquo;They carry thrift to the pitch of avarice and vice. Zola&rsquo;s &lsquo;La
+ Terre&rsquo; is not without foundation on fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And excellent as is the principle of forethought, invaluable as is the
+ habit of laying by for a rainy day, I have at last come to the conclusion
+ that of the two national weaknesses, French avarice and English lavishness
+ and love of spending, the latter is more in accordance with progress and
+ the spirit of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another part of the village we called upon a hale old body of
+ seventy-seven, who not only lived alone and did everything for herself
+ indoors but the entire work of a market garden, every inch of the two and
+ a half acres being, of course, her own. Piled against an inner wall we saw
+ a dozen or so faggots each weighing, we were told, half a hundredweight.
+ Will it be believed that this old woman had picked up and carried from the
+ forest on her back every one of these faggots? The poor, or rather those
+ who will, are allowed to glean firewood in all the State forests of
+ France. Let no tourist bestow a few sous upon aged men and women bearing
+ home such treasure-trove! Quite possibly the dole may affront some owner
+ of houses and lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we inspected her garden, walls covered with fine grapes, tomatoes and
+ melons, of splendid quality, to say nothing of vegetables in profusion, it
+ seemed all the more difficult to reconcile facts so incongruous. Here was
+ a market gardener on her own account, mistress of all she surveyed, glad
+ as a gipsy to pick up sticks for winter use. But the burden of her story
+ was the same:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Il faut travailler pour ses enfants&rdquo; (one must work for one&rsquo;s children),
+ she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these little farm-houses are so many homely fortresses, cottage and
+ outhouses being securely walled in, a precaution necessary with aged,
+ moneyed folks living absolutely alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fourth visit was paid to a charming old Philémon and Baucis, the best
+ possible specimens of their class. The husband lay in bed, ill of an
+ incurable malady, and spotlessly white were his tasselled nightcap, shirt
+ and bedclothes. Very clean and neat too was the bedroom opening on to the
+ little front yard, beneath each window of the one-storeyed dwelling being
+ a brilliant border of asters. The housewife also was a picture of
+ tidiness, her cotton gown carefully patched and scrupulously clean. This
+ worthy couple are said to be worth fifty thousand francs. The wife, a
+ sexagenarian, does all the work of the house besides waiting on her good
+ man, to whom she is devoted, but a married son and daughter-in-law share
+ her duties at night. Here was no touch of sordidness or suggestion of &ldquo;La
+ Terre,&rdquo; instead a delightful picture of rustic dignity and ease. The
+ housewife sold us half a bushel of pears, these two like their neighbours
+ living by the produce of their small farm and garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I often dropped in upon Madame B&mdash;&mdash; to whom even morning calls
+ were acceptable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the occasion of my farewell visit she had something pretty to say about
+ one of my own novels, a French translation of which I had presented her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that you have some books of your own?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here they are,&rdquo; she said, depositing an armful on the table. &ldquo;But I have
+ never read much, and mostly <i>bibelots</i>&rdquo; (trifles.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her poor little library consisted of <i>bibelots</i> indeed, a history of
+ Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc for children, and half a dozen other works, mostly school
+ prizes of the kind awarded before school prizes in France were worth the
+ paper on which they were printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. &mdash; LARCHANT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a certain stimulating quality of elasticity and crispness in the
+ French atmosphere which our own does not possess. France, moreover, with
+ its seven climates&mdash;for the description of these, see Reclus&rsquo;
+ Geography&mdash;does undoubtedly offer longer, less broken, spells of hot
+ summer weather than the United Kingdom. But let me for once and for all
+ dispel a widespread illusion. The late Lord Lytton, when Ambassador in
+ Paris, used to say that in the French capital you could procure any
+ climate you pleased. And experience proves that without budging an inch
+ you may in France get as many and as rapid climatic changes as anywhere
+ else under the sun. At noon in mid-May last I was breakfasting with
+ friends on the Champs Elysées, when my hostess put a match to the fire and
+ my host jumped up and lighted six wax candles. So dense had become the
+ heavens that we could no longer see to handle knives and forks! Hail,
+ wind, darkness and temperature recalled a November squall at home. Yet the
+ day before I had enjoyed perfect summer weather in the Jardin
+ d&rsquo;Acclimitation. Invariableness is no more an attribute of the French
+ climate than our own. Wherever we go we must take a change of dress, for
+ all the world as if we were bound for the other side of the Tweed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first Sunday at Bourron, on this third visit, was of perfect stillness,
+ unclouded brilliance and southern languor, heralding, so we fondly
+ imagined, the very morrow for an excursion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the night a strong wind rose up, but as we had ordered a carriage for
+ Larchant, and as carriages in these parts are not always to be had, as,
+ moreover, grown folks no more than children like to defer their pleasure,
+ off we set, two of the party on cycles forming a body guard. There seemed
+ no likelihood of rain and in the forest we should not feel the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first mile or two all went well. Far ahead of us our cyclists
+ bowled gaily along in the forest avenues, all of us being sheltered from
+ the wind. It was not till we skirted a wide opening that we felt the full
+ force of the tornado, soon overtaking our blowzed, dishevelled companions,
+ both on foot and looking miserable enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We re-entered the forest, and a little later, emerging from the fragrant
+ depths of a pine wood, got our first view of Larchant, coming suddenly
+ upon what looks like a cathedral towering above the plain, at its base a
+ clustering village, whitewashed brown-roofed houses amid vineyards and
+ orchards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A grandiose view it is, recalling the minaret of Mansourah near Tclemcen
+ in Algeria, that gigantic monolith apparently carved out of Indian gold
+ and cleft in two like a pomegranate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly we wound up towards the village, the wind, or rather hurricane,
+ gathering in force as we went. It was indeed no easy task to get a nearer
+ view of the church; more than once we were compelled to beat a retreat,
+ whilst it seemed really unsafe to linger underneath such a ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine the tower of St. Jacques in the Rue de Rivoli split in two, the
+ upright half standing in a bare wind-swept level, and you have some faint
+ notion of Larchant. On nearer approach such an impression of grandeur is
+ by no means diminished. This magnificent parish church, in part a ruin, in
+ part restored, rather grows upon one upon closer inspection. Reparation,
+ for want of funds, has stopped short at the absolutely necessary. The body
+ of the church has been so far restored as to be fit for use, but its
+ crowning glory, the tower, remains a torso.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The front view suggests no such dilapidation. How long will the shell of
+ that lofty twelfth century tower remain standing? To my mind it hangs over
+ the low, one-storeyed houses at its feet, a veritable sword of Damocles,
+ sooner or later sure to fall with crushing force. The porch shows much
+ beautiful carving, unfortunately defaced, and the interior some perfect
+ specimens of pure Gothic arches, the whole whitewashed and bare as a barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Larchant in the middle ages was a famous pilgrimage, and in the days of
+ Charles IX. a halting stage on the road to Italy. It does not seem to
+ attract many English pilgrims at the present time. Anyhow tea-making here
+ seems a wholly unknown art. In a fairly clean inn, however, a good-natured
+ landlady allowed us to make ourselves at home alike in kitchen and pantry.
+ One of our party unearthed a time-honoured tea-pot&mdash;we had of course
+ taken the precaution of carrying tea with us&mdash;one by one milk and
+ sugar were forthcoming in what may be called wholesale fashion, milk-jugs
+ and sugar-basins being apparently articles of superfluity, and in company
+ of a charming old dog and irresistible kitten, also of some quiet
+ wayfarers, we five-o&rsquo;clocked merrily enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our business at Larchant was not wholly archaeological. Buffeted as we
+ were by the hurricane, we managed to pay a visit in search of eggs and
+ poultry for the table at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If peasant and farming life in France certainly from time to time reminds
+ us of Zola&rsquo;s &ldquo;La Terre,&rdquo; we are also reminded of an aspect which the great
+ novelist ignores. As will be seen from the following sketch sordidness and
+ aspiration oft times, I am almost tempted to say, and most often, go hand
+ in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see one generation addicted to an existence so laborious and material
+ as to have no counterpart in England; under the same roof growing up
+ another, sharing all the advantages of social and intellectual progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far from the church we called upon a family of large and wealthy
+ farmers, owners of the soil they cultivate, millionaires by comparison
+ with our neighbours at Bourron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We arrived in the midst of a busy time, a steam corn thresher plying in
+ the vast farm-yard. The interior of the big, straggling farm-house we did
+ not see, but two aged women dressed like poor peasants received us in the
+ kitchen, a dingy, unswept, uninviting place, as are most farm-house
+ kitchens in France. These old ladies were respectively mother-in-law and
+ aunt of the farmer, whose wife, the real mistress of the house, soon came
+ in. This tall, stout, florid, brawny-armed woman was evidently what French
+ folks call <i>une maîtresse femme</i>, a first-rate housewife and manager;
+ a somewhat awe-inspiring person she looked as she stood before us, arms
+ akimbo, her short coarse serge skirt showing shoes well acquainted with
+ stable and neat-house, one dirty blue cotton apron worn over another
+ equally dirty. Now, my hostess, as I have said, wanted to purchase some
+ poultry for the table, and here comes in the moral of my story. Vainly the
+ lady begged and begged again for a couple of chickens. &ldquo;But we want them
+ for our Parisians,&rdquo; the three farming women reiterated, one echoing the
+ other. &ldquo;Our Parisians, our Parisians,&rdquo; the words were repeated a dozen
+ times. And as was explained to me afterwards, &ldquo;our Parisians,&rdquo; for whom
+ the pick of the poultry yard was being reserved, were the two sons of the
+ rather forbidding-looking matron before us, young gentlemen being educated
+ in a Paris Lycée, and both of them destined for the learned professions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This side of rural life, this ambition, akin to what we see taking quite
+ another form among ourselves, Zola does not sufficiently realize. Shocking
+ indeed were the miserliness and materialism of such existences but for the
+ element of self-denial, this looking ahead for those to follow after. How
+ differently, for instance, the farm-house and its group must have
+ appeared, but for the evident pride and hopes centred in <i>nos Parisiens</i>,
+ who knows?&mdash;perhaps youths destined to attain the first rank in
+ official or political callings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farther door of the smoke-dried kitchen opened on to the farm-yard,
+ around which were stables and neat-houses. In the latter the mistress of
+ the house proudly drew our attention to a beautiful blue cow, grey in our
+ ignorance we had called it, one of a score or more of superb kine all now
+ reclining on their haunches before being turned out to pasture. In front,
+ cocks and hens disported themselves on a dunghill, whilst beyond, the
+ steam corn thresher was at work, every hand being called into requisition.
+ No need here for particulars and figures. The superabundant wealth, so
+ carefully husbanded for the two youths in Paris, was self-evident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tornado, with threatening showers and the sight of a huge tree just
+ uprooted by the road side, necessitated the shortest possible cut home. In
+ fair weather a prolongation of our drive would have given us a sight of
+ some famous rocks of this rocky forest. But we carried home memories
+ enough for one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. &mdash; RECLOSES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This ancient village, reached by the forest, is one of the most
+ picturesque of the many picturesque places hereabouts. Quitting a stretch
+ of pinewood we traverse flat cultivated land, gradually winding up towards
+ a long straggling village surmounted by a lofty church tower of grey
+ stone. On either side of this street are enclosed farm-houses, the
+ interiors being as pictorial as can be imagined. Untidy as are most French
+ homesteads, for peasant farmers pay little court to the Graces, there is
+ always a bit of flower garden. Sometimes this flower garden is aerial, a
+ bower of roses on the roof sometimes amid the incongruous surroundings of
+ pig styes or manure heaps. This region is a petunia land; wherever we go
+ we find a veritable blaze of petunia blossoms, pale mauve, deepest rose,
+ purple and white massed together without order or view to effect. In one
+ of the little fortresses&mdash;for so these antique farmhouses may be
+ called&mdash;we saw a rustic piazza, pillars and roof of rude unhewn stone
+ blazing with petunias, no attempt whatever at making the structure whole,
+ symmetrical or graceful to the eye. It seems as if these homely though
+ rich farmers, or rather farmers&rsquo; wives, could not do without flowers,
+ above the street jutting many aerial gardens, the only touch of beauty in
+ the work-a-day picture. These interiors would supply artists with the most
+ captivating subjects. The women, their skins brown and wrinkled as ripe,
+ shelled walnuts, their head-dress a blue and white kerchief neatly folded
+ and knotted, the expression of their faces shrewd and kindly, all
+ contribute to the charm of the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here as elsewhere the young women and girls affect a little fashion and
+ finery on Sundays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We should not know unless we were told that Recloses was one of the
+ richest villages in these parts. On this Sunday, September 1st, 1901, in
+ one place a steam thresher was at work, although for the most part folks
+ seemed to be taking their ease in their holiday garb. Perhaps the
+ difficulty of procuring the machine accounted for the fact of seeing it on
+ a Sunday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the farm-yards showed a charming menagerie of poultry and the
+ prettiest rabbits in the world, all disporting themselves in most amicable
+ fashion. Here, as elsewhere, when we stopped to admire, the housewife came
+ out, pleased to interchange a few words with us. The sight of Recloses is
+ not, however, its long line of little walled-in farm-houses, but the
+ curious rocky platform at the end of the village, perforated with holes
+ always full of water, and the stupendous view thence obtained&mdash;an
+ ocean of sombre green unrelieved by a single sail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already the vast panorama of forest shows signs of autumn, light touches
+ of yellow relieving the depths of solemn green. On such a day of varied
+ cloudland the perspective must be quite different, and perhaps even more
+ beautiful than under a burning cloudless sky, no soft gradations between
+ the greens and the blues. The little pools or perforations breaking the
+ surface of the broad platform, acres of rocks, are, I believe, unexplained
+ phenomena. In the driest season these openings contain water, presumably
+ forced upwards from hidden springs. The pools, just now covered with green
+ slime, curiously spot the grey surface of the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, leaving the world of forest to our right, we continue our journey in
+ the direction of Chapelle la Reine, we overlook a vast plain the
+ population of which is very different from that of the smiling fertile
+ prosperous valley of the Loing. This plain, extending to Étampes and
+ Pithiviers, might, I am told, possibly have suggested to Zola some scenes
+ and characters of &ldquo;La Terre.&rdquo; A French friend of mine, well acquainted
+ with these parts, tells me that at any rate there, if anywhere, the great
+ novelist might have found suggestions for such a work. The soil is arid,
+ the cultivation is primitive in the extreme and the people are rough and
+ uncouth. The other day an English resident at Marlotte, when cycling among
+ these villages of the plain inquired his way of a countryman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not a Frenchman?&rdquo; quoth the latter before giving the desired
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No I am not&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not an American?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I am an Englishman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; was the answer, &ldquo;I smelt you out sure enough&rdquo; (<i>Je vous ai bien
+ senti</i>). Whereupon he proceeded to put the wayfarer on his right road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a rule French peasants are exceedingly courteous to strangers, but
+ these good people of the plain seldom come in contact with the tourist
+ world, their country not being sufficiently picturesque even to attract
+ the cyclist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curious thirteenth-century church of Recloses had long been an art
+ pilgrimage. It contains, or at least should contain, some of the most
+ wonderful wood carvings in France; figures and groups of figures highly
+ realistic in the best sense of the word. These sculptures, unfortunately,
+ we were not able to inspect a second time; exhibited in the Paris
+ Exhibition they had not yet been replaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a beautiful drive from Recloses to Bourron by the Croix de Saint
+ Hérem. A little way out of the village we came upon a pretty scene,
+ people, in family groups, playing croquet under the trees. Dancing also
+ goes on in summer as in the olden time. It was curious as we drove along
+ to note the behaviour of my friend&rsquo;s dog: it never for a moment closed its
+ eyes, and yet there was nothing to look at but avenue after avenue of
+ trees. What could the little animal find so fascinating in the somewhat
+ monotonous sight? A friend at home assures me that a pet of her own
+ enjoyed drives from purely snobbish motives; his great gratification
+ arising from the sense of superiority over fellow dogs compelled to trudge
+ on foot. But in these woodland solitudes there was no room for such a
+ sentiment, not a dog being visible, only now and then a cyclist flashing
+ by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no more splendid cycling ground in the world than this forest of
+ Fontainebleau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakespeare says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;This guest of summer,
+ The temple-haunting martlet, does approve
+ By his loved mansionry that the heaven&rsquo;s breath
+ Smells wooingly here: no jutty frieze, buttress,
+ Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made
+ His pendent bed, and procreant cradle: Where they
+ Most breed and haunt, I have observed the air
+ Is delicate.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ About this time at Bourron the village street was alive with swallows
+ preparing, I presume, for departure southwards. A beautiful sight it was
+ to see these winged congregations evidently concerting their future
+ movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another feature to be mentioned is the number of large handsome moths
+ frequenting these regions. One beautiful creature as large as a swallow
+ used to fly into our dining room every evening for warmth; fastening
+ itself to the wall it would there remain undisturbed until the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I finish these reminiscences of Bourron by the following citation from
+ Balzac&rsquo;s &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo;:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On entering Nemours at five o&rsquo;clock in the morning, Ursule woke up
+ feeling quite ashamed of her untidiness, and of encountering Savinien&rsquo;s
+ look of admiration. During the time that the diligence took to come from
+ Bouron (<i>sic</i>), where it stopped a few minutes, the young man had
+ observed Ursule. He had noted the candour of her mind, the beauty of her
+ person, the whiteness of her complexion, the delicacy of her features, the
+ charm of the voice which had uttered the short and expressive sentence, in
+ which the poor child said everything, while wishing to say nothing. In
+ short I do not know what presentiment made him see in Ursule the woman
+ whom the doctor had depicted, framed in gold, with these magic words:&mdash;&lsquo;Seven
+ to eight hundred thousand francs!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holiday tourists in these parts cannot do better than put this love-story
+ in their pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; NEMOURS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who knows Nemours,&rdquo; wrote Balzac, &ldquo;knows that nature there is as
+ beautiful as art,&rdquo; and again he dwells upon the charm of the sleepy little
+ town memorialized in &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The delicious valley of Loing indeed fascinated Balzac almost as much as
+ his beloved Touraine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his recently published letters to Madame Hanska have shown us, several
+ of his greatest novels were written in this neighbourhood, whilst in the
+ one named above we have a setting as striking as that of &ldquo;Eugenie Grandet&rdquo;
+ or &ldquo;Béatrix.&rdquo; A ten minutes&rsquo; railway journey brings us to Nemours, one of
+ the few French towns, by the way, in which Arthur Young lost his temper.
+ Here is his own account of the incident:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sleep at Nemours, where we met with an innkeeper who exceeded in knavery
+ all we had met with, either in France or Italy: for supper, we had a <i>soupe
+ maigre</i>, a partridge and a chicken roasted, a plate of celery, a small
+ cauliflower, two bottles of poor <i>vin du Pays</i>, and a dessert of two
+ biscuits and four apples: here is the bill:&mdash;Potage 1 liv. 10f.&mdash;Perdrix
+ 2 liv. 10f.&mdash;Poulet 2 liv.&mdash;Céleri 1 liv. 4f.&mdash;Choufleur 2
+ liv.&mdash;Pain et dessert 2 liv.&mdash;Feu et appartement 6 liv.&mdash;Total
+ 19 liv. 8f. Against so impudent an extortion we remonstrated severely but
+ in vain. We then insisted on his signing the bill, which, after many
+ evasions, he did, <i>à l&rsquo;étoile, Foulliare</i>. But having been carried to
+ the inn, not as the star, but the <i>écu de France</i>, we suspected some
+ deceit: and going out to examine the premises, we found the sign to be
+ really the <i>écu</i>, and learned on enquiry that his own name was Roux,
+ instead of <i>Foulliare</i>: he was not prepared for this detection, or
+ for the execration we poured on such infamous conduct; but he ran away in
+ an instant and hid himself till we were gone. In justice to the world,
+ however, such a fellow ought to be marked out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I confess I do not myself find such charges excessive. From a very
+ different motive, Nemours put me as much out of temper as it had done my
+ great predecessor a hundred years before. Will it be believed that a town
+ memorialized by the great, perhaps <i>the</i> greatest, French novelist,
+ could not produce its title of honour, in other words a copy of &ldquo;Ursule
+ Mirouët&rdquo;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This town of 4,000 and odd souls and chef-lieu of department does not
+ possess a bookseller&rsquo;s shop. We did indeed see in a stationer&rsquo;s window one
+ or two penny books, among these an abridged translation of &ldquo;Uncle Tom&rsquo;s
+ Cabin.&rdquo; But a friendly wine merchant, who seemed to take my reproaches
+ very much to heart, assured us that in the municipal library all Balzac&rsquo;s
+ works were to be found, besides many valuable books dealing with local
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold comfort this for tourists who want to buy a copy of the Nemours
+ story! As we stroll about the grass-grown streets, we feel that railways,
+ telephones and the rest have very little changed Nemours since Balzac&rsquo;s
+ descriptions, written three-quarters of a century ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet and pastoral surroundings of the place are in strong contrast
+ with the sordid next-of-kin peopling the pages of his romance. Beyond the
+ fine old church of rich grey stone, you obtain as enchanting a view as the
+ valley of the Loing can show, a broad, crystal-clear river winding amid
+ picturesque architecture, richest and most varied foliage, ash and weeping
+ willow mingling with deeper-hued beech and alder. It is difficult, almost
+ impossible, to describe the charm of this riverside scenery. In one
+ passage of his novel, Balzac compares the view to the scenery of an opera,
+ and in very truth every feature forms a whole so harmonious as to suggest
+ artistic arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature and accident have effected the happiest possible combination of
+ wood, water and building stone. Nothing is here to mar the complete
+ picture. Grandly the cathedral-like church and fine old château stand out
+ to-day against the brilliant sky, soft grey stone and dark brown making
+ subdued harmonies. Formerly Nemours was surrounded by woods, hence its
+ name. People are said to attain here a very great age, life being tranquil
+ and the nature of the people somewhat lethargic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst the more energetic inhabitants are a lady dentist and her sister,
+ who between them do a first rate business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French peasants never dream of indulging in false teeth; such an idea
+ would never enter the head of even the richest. But an aching tooth
+ interferes with the labours of the farm, and must be got rid of at any
+ cost. This young lady <i>chirurgien et dentiste</i>, such is the name
+ figuring on her door plate, is not only most expert in using the forceps,
+ but is attractive and pretty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her charges are two francs for a visit or operation; in partnership with
+ her is a sister who does the accounts, and as nuns and sisters of charity
+ unprovided with certificates are no longer allowed to draw teeth, act as
+ midwives and cut off limbs, country doctors and dentists of either sex
+ have now a fair chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No town in this part of France suffered more during the German invasion.
+ The municipal authorities had at first decided upon making a bold stand,
+ thus endeavouring to check the enemy&rsquo;s advance on Paris. Differences of
+ opinion arose, prudential counsels prevailed, and it was through a
+ mistaken order that a Prussian detachment was attacked near the town. The
+ consequences were appalling. The station was burned to the ground,
+ enormous contributions in money and material were exacted from the town,
+ some of the authorities were made to travel on the railways with the
+ invaders, and others were carried off to remote fortresses of Brandenburg
+ and there kept as prisoners for nine months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The account of all these incidents, written by a victim, may be consulted
+ in a volume of the town library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If people frequently attain the age of a hundred in Nemours, as I was
+ assured, it is rather due to placid temperament than to intellectual
+ torpor. The town possesses learned societies, and a member of its
+ archaeological association has published a book of great local interest
+ and value, viz:&mdash;&ldquo;Nemours, Temps Géologiques, Temps Préhistoriques,
+ Temps Historiques, par E. Doigneau, Membre de la Société Archéologique de
+ Seine-et-Marne, Ancien Vice Président de la section de Fontainebleau,
+ Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, although this neighbourhood has offered a rich field for
+ prehistoric research, Nemours as yet possesses no museum, I do verily
+ believe the first French town of any size I have ever found in France
+ without one at least in embryo. For the cyclist the run from Bourron to
+ Nemours is delightful, on the hottest day in the year spinning along broad
+ well-wooded roads, with lovely perspectives from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. &mdash; LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From Bourron, in September, 1900, I journeyed with a friend to La Charité,
+ a little town four hours off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is ever with feelings of pleasurable anticipation that I approach any
+ French town for the first time. The number of these, alas! now being few,
+ I have of late years been compelled to restrain curiosity, leaving one or
+ two dreamed-of spots for the future, saying with Wordsworth:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Should life be dull and spirits low,
+ &lsquo;Twill soothe us in our sorrow,
+ That earth has something yet to show,
+ The bonny holms of Yarrow.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ La Charité, picturesque of the picturesque&mdash;according to French
+ accounts, English, we have none&mdash;for many years had been a Yarrow to
+ me, a reserve of delight, held back from sheer Epicureanism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As, on the 12th of September, the cumbersome old omnibus rattled over the
+ unpaved streets, both to myself and fellow traveller came a feeling of
+ disenchantment. We had apparently reached one more of those sleepy little
+ <i>chefs-lieux</i> familiar to both, places of interest certainly, the
+ sleepiest having some architectural gem or artistic treasure. But here was
+ surely no Yarrow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later we discovered our error. Hardly had we reached our
+ rooms in the more than old-fashioned Hôtel du Grand Monarque, than from a
+ side window, we caught sight of the Loire; so near, indeed, lay the
+ bright, blue river, that we could almost have thrown pebbles into its
+ clear depths; quitting the hotel, half a dozen steps, no more were needed,
+ an enchanting scene burst upon the view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most beautiful is the site of La Charité, built terrace-wise, not on the
+ skirts but on the very hem of the Loire, here no revolutionary torrent,
+ sweeping away whole villages, leaving only church steeples visible above
+ the engulfing waters, as I had once seen it at Nantes, but a broad,
+ smooth, crystal expanse of sky-blue. Over against the handsome stone
+ bridge to-day having its double in the limpid water, we see a little
+ islanded hamlet crowned with picturesque church tower; and, placing
+ ourselves midway between the town and its suburban twin, obtain vast and
+ lovely perspectives. Westward, gradually purpling as evening wears on,
+ rises the magnificent height of Sancerre, below, amid low banks bordered
+ with poplar, flowing the Loire. Eastward, looking towards Nevers, our eyes
+ rest on the same broad sheet of blue; before us, straight as an arrow,
+ stretches the French road of a pattern we know so well, an apparently
+ interminable avenue of plane or poplar trees. The river is low at this
+ season, and the velvety brown sands recall the sea-shore when the tide is
+ out. Exquisite, at such an hour are the reflections, every object having
+ its mirrored self in the transparent waves, the lights and shadows of
+ twilight making lovely effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As is the case with Venice, La Charité should be reached by river, and a
+ pity it seems that little steamers do not ply between all the principal
+ towns on the Loire. How enchanting, like the immortal Vert-Vert, of
+ Gresset&rsquo;s poem, to travel from Nevers to the river&rsquo;s mouth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I had headed this paper merely with the words &ldquo;La Charité,&rdquo; I should
+ surely be supposed to treat of some charitable institution in France, or
+ of charity as worked out in the abstract, for this first of Christian
+ virtues has given the place its name, presumably perpetuating the
+ charitableness of its abbatial founders. Just upon two thousand years ago,
+ some pious monks of the order of Cluny settled here, calling their
+ foundation La Charité. Gradually a town grew around the abbey walls, and
+ what better name for any than this? So La Charité it was in early feudal
+ times, and La Charité it remains in our own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place itself is as antiquated and behindhand as any I have seen in
+ France, which is saying a good deal. A French gentleman, native of these
+ parts, told me that in his grandfather&rsquo;s time our Hôtel du Grand Monarque
+ enjoyed a fine reputation. In many respects it deserves the same still,
+ excellent beds, good cooking, quietude and low prices not being so common
+ as they might be in French provincial inns. The house, too, is curious,
+ what with its spiral stone staircases, little passages leading to one room
+ here, to another there&mdash;as if in former days travellers objected to
+ walls that adjoined those of other people&mdash;and unaccountable levels,
+ it is impossible to understand whether you were on the first floor or the
+ second floor, house-top, or basement. Our bedrooms, for instance, reached
+ by one of the spiral stone staircases just named never used by myself
+ without apprehension, landed us on the edge of a poultry yard; I suppose a
+ wide bit of roof had been converted into this use, but it was quite
+ impossible to make out any architectural plan. These rooms adjoining this
+ <i>basse-cour</i>, hens and chicks would enter unceremoniously and pick up
+ the crumbs we threw to them. Fastidious tourists might resent so primitive
+ a state of things, the hotel, I should say, remaining exactly what it was
+ under the Ancien Régime. The beauty and interest of various kinds around,
+ more than make up for small drawbacks. Here the archaeologist will not
+ grudge several days. Ruined as it is, the ancient abbey may be
+ reconstructed in the mind&rsquo;s eye by the help of what we see before us. The
+ fragments of crumbling wall, the noble tower and portal, the delicately
+ sculptured pillars, cornices, and arches, enable us to build up the whole,
+ just as Cuvier made out an entire skeleton from the examination of a
+ single bone. These grand architectural fragments have not been neglected
+ by the learned. Unfortunately, and exceptionally, La Charité possesses
+ neither public library nor museum, but at Nevers the traveller would
+ surely find a copy of Prosper Merimée&rsquo;s &ldquo;Notes Archéologiques&rdquo; in which is
+ a minute account of these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alike without and within the ruins show a medley of styles and richest
+ ornamentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superb north-west tower, that forms so striking an object from the
+ river, is said to be in the Burgundian style; rather should we put it
+ after a Burgundian style, so varied and heterogeneous are the churches
+ coming under this category. Again, the guide books inform us that the open
+ space between this tower and the church was occupied by the narthex, a
+ vast outer portico of ancient Burgundian churches used for the reception
+ of penitents, catechumens, and strangers. All interested in ecclesiastical
+ architecture should visit the abbey church of Vézelay, which possesses a
+ magnificent narthex of two storeys, restored by the late Viollet le Duc.
+ Vézelay, by the way, may be easily reached from La Charité.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the elaborate sculptures of this grand tower, will be noted the
+ superb colour of the building stone, carved out of deep-hued gold it looks
+ under the burning blue sky. And of a piece are arch, portico and column,
+ one and all helping us to reconstruct the once mighty abbey, home of a
+ brotherhood so powerful as to necessitate disciplinary measures on the
+ part of the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior of the church shows the same elaborateness of detail, and the
+ same mixture of styles, the Romanesque-Burgundian predominating, so, at
+ least, affirm authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idler and lover of the picturesque will not find time hang heavy on
+ his hands here. Very sweet are the riverside views, no matter on which
+ side we obtain them, and the quaintest little staircases of streets run
+ from base to summit of the pyramidally-built town. A climb of a quarter of
+ an hour takes us to an admirable coign of vantage just above the abbey
+ church, and commanding a view of Sancerre and the river. That little town,
+ so splendidly placed, is celebrated for its eight months&rsquo; defence as a
+ Huguenot stronghold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Charité, with most mediaeval towns, was fortified, one old city gate
+ still remaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day, as when that charming writer, Émile Montégut visited the place
+ more than a generation ago, the townspeople ply their crafts and domestic
+ callings abroad. In fine weather, no work that can possibly be done in the
+ open air is done within four walls. Another curious feature of these
+ engaging old streets, is the number of blacksmiths&rsquo; shops. It would seem
+ as if all the horses, mules, and donkeys of the Nièvre were brought hither
+ to be shod, the smithy fires keeping up a perpetual illumination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third and still more noteworthy point is the infrequency&mdash;absence,
+ I am inclined to say&mdash;of cabarets. Soberest of the sober, orderliest
+ of the orderly, appear these good folks of La Charité, les Caritates as
+ they are called, nor, apparently, has tradition demoralised them. One
+ might expect that a town dedicated to the virtue of almsgiving would
+ abound in beggars. Not one did we see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. &mdash; POUGUES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If an ugly name could kill a place, Pougues must surely have been ruined
+ as a health resort centuries ago. Coming, too, after that soothing,
+ harmoniously named La Charité, could any configuration of letters grate
+ more harshly on the ear? Truth to tell, my travelling companion and myself
+ had a friendly little altercation about Pougues. It seemed impossible to
+ believe pleasant things of a town so labelled. But the reputation of
+ Pougues dates from Hercules and Julius Caesar, both heroes, it is said,
+ having had recourse to its mineral springs! Coming from legend to history,
+ we find that Pougues, or, at least, the waters of Pougues, were patronised
+ by the least objectionable son of Catherine de Medicis, Henri II. of
+ France and runaway King of Poland. Imputing his disorders to sorcery, he
+ was thus reassured by a sensible physician named Pidoux: &ldquo;Sire, the malady
+ from which you suffer is due to no witchcraft. Lead a quiet life for ten
+ weeks, and drink the water of Pougues.&rdquo; The best king France ever had,
+ namely, the gay Gascon, and after him Louis XIII., by no means one of the
+ worst, had recourse to Pougues waters; also that arch-voluptuary and
+ arch-despot, the Sun-King, who imagined that even syntax and prosody must
+ bow to his will. {Footnote: One day the young king ordered his carriage,
+ saying, &ldquo;<i>mon</i> carrosse,&rdquo; instead of &ldquo;<i>ma</i> carrosse,&rdquo; the French
+ word being derived from the Italian feminine, <i>carrozza</i>. On being
+ gently corrected, the king flew into a passion, declaring that masculine
+ he had called it, and masculine it should remain, which it has done to
+ this day, so the story runs. Let the Republic look to it!} And Madame de
+ Sevigné&mdash;for whom, however, I have scant love, for did she not hail
+ the revocation of the Edict of Nantes?&mdash;Madame de Sevigné honoured
+ Pougues with an epigram.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second Purgatory she styled the douches, and, doubtless, in those
+ non-washing days, a second Purgatory it would have been to most folks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Pougues, nevertheless, we went, and if these notes induce the more
+ enterprising of my countrypeople to do the same next summer, they are not
+ likely to repent of the experiment. Never, indeed, was a little Eden of
+ coolness, freshness, and greenery more abominably used by its sponsors,
+ whilst the name of so many French townlings are a poem in themselves!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a view of sky blue waters and smooth brown sands we were transported
+ to a world of emerald green verdure and richest foliage, interpenetrated
+ with golden light. On this 14th of September the warmth and dazzlingness
+ of mid-summer still reigned at Pougues; and the scenery in which we
+ suddenly found ourselves, bosquets, dells, and glades, with all the charm
+ but without the savageness of the forest, recalled the loveliest lines of
+ the laziest poet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Was naught around but images of rest,
+ And flowery beds, that slumberous influence kest{1},
+ Sleep-soothing groves and quiet lawns between,
+ From poppies breathed; and beds of pleasant green.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ {Footnote 1: Cast}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A drive of a few minutes had landed us in the heart of this little
+ Paradise, baths and Casino standing in the midst of park-like grounds.
+ Apparently Pougues, that is to say, the Pougues-les-Eaux of later days,
+ has been cut out of natural woodland, the Casino gardens and its
+ surroundings being rich in forest trees of superb growth and great
+ variety. The wealth of foliage gives this new fashionable little
+ watering-place an enticingly rural appearance, nor is the attraction of
+ water wholly wanting. To quote once more a most quotable, if little read,
+ poet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Meantime, unnumbered glittering streamlets played,
+ And hurled everywhere their water&rsquo;s sheen,
+ That, as they bickered through the sunny glade,
+ Though restless still, themselves a lulling murmur made.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ A pretty little lake, animated with swans, varies the woodland scenery,
+ and tropical birds in an aviary lend brilliant bits of colour. The usual
+ accessories of a health resort are, of course, here&mdash;reading room,
+ concert hall, theatre, and other attractions, rapidly turning the place
+ into a lesser Vichy. The number and magnificence of the hotels, the villas
+ and <i>cottages</i>, that have sprung up on every side, bespeak the
+ popularity of Pougues-les-Eaux, as it is now styled, the surname adding
+ more dignity than harmoniousness. One advantage Pougues possesses over its
+ rivals, is position. At Aix-les-Bains, Plombières, Salins, and how many
+ other inland spas, you are literally wedged in between shelving hills. If
+ you want to enjoy wide horizons, and anything like a breeze, you must get
+ well outside the town. Never in hot, dusty, crowded cities have I felt so
+ half-suffocated as at the two first named places. Pougues, on the
+ contrary, lies in a broad expanse of beautifully varied woodland and
+ champaign, no more appropriate site conceivable for the now popular
+ air-cure. &ldquo;Pougues-les-Eaux, Cure d&rsquo;Eau and Cure d&rsquo;Air,&rdquo; is now its proud
+ title, folks flocking hither, not only to imbibe its delicious, ice-cold,
+ sparkling waters, but to drink in its highly nourishing air. The
+ iron-gaseous waters resemble in properties those of Spa and Vichy. From
+ one to five tumblers are ordered a day, according to the condition of the
+ drinker, a little stroll between each dose being advisable. With regard to
+ the air-cure, visitors are reminded that at Pougues they find the four
+ kinds of walking exercise recommended by a German specialist, namely, that
+ on quite level ground; secondly, a very gradual climb; thirdly, a somewhat
+ steeper bit of up-hill; and, fourthly, the really arduous ascent of Mont
+ Givre. In order to entice health-seekers, all kinds of gratifications
+ await them on the summit, restaurant, dairy, reading room, tennis court,
+ and croquet ground, to say nothing of a panorama almost unrivalled in
+ eastern France. We have, indeed, climbed the Eiffel Tower, in other words,
+ are on a level with that final stage from which floats the Tricolour.
+ Looking east we behold the sombre Morvan and Nevers rising above the
+ Loire, whilst westward, beyond the plain and the Loire, may be descried
+ the cathedral of Bourges. How many regions visited and revisited by myself
+ now lie before my eyes as on a map&mdash;the Berri, Georges Sand&rsquo;s
+ country, the little Celtic kingdom of the Morvan, on the borders of which,
+ for so many years, that charming writer, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, made his
+ home; the Nivernais, with its souvenirs of Vert-Vert and Mazarin, or,
+ rather, Mazarin and Vert-Vert, the Department of the Allier made from the
+ ancient province of the Bourbonnais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wanderer in France should never be without his Arthur Young. That &ldquo;wise
+ and honest traveller,&rdquo; of course, had been before us, but travelling in a
+ contrary direction. &ldquo;From the hill that descends to Pougues,&rdquo; he wrote on
+ his way from Nevers to Fontainebleau, in 1790, &ldquo;is an extensive view to
+ the north, and after Pouilly a (<i>sic</i>) fine scenery, with the Loire
+ doubling through it.&rdquo; But the great farmer made this journey in
+ mid-winter, thus missing its charm. And Arthur Young was ever too intent
+ upon crops and roots to notice wild flowers. Had he traversed this region
+ earlier in the year, he might have missed an exquisite feature, namely,
+ the sweeps of autumn crocus. Just now the rich pastures around Pougues, as
+ well as suburban lawns and wayside spaces, were tinted with delicate
+ mauve, the ground being literally carpeted with these flowers. It was as
+ if the lightest possible veil of pale purple covered the turf, the same
+ profusion being visible on every side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One final word about this sweet and most unmusically named place. On no
+ occasion and nowhere have I been received with more cordiality than at
+ dear little Pougues, a place I was told there utterly ignored by my
+ country people. I do honestly believe, indeed, that myself and fellow
+ traveller were the first English folk to wander about those delicious
+ gardens, and taste the incomparable waters, cool, sparkling, invigorating
+ as those of Spa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One enterprising proprietor of an excellent hotel was so anxious to secure
+ an English <i>clientèle</i>, the best <i>clientèle</i> in the world, so
+ hotel keepers aver, that she offered me a handsome percentage on any
+ visitors I would send her. In the most delicate manner I could command, I
+ gave her to understand that my inquiries about Pougues were not made from
+ a business point of view, but that I should certainly proclaim its many
+ attractions on the house-tops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. &mdash; NEVERS AND MOULINS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I found the well-remembered Hôtel de France much as I had left it, just
+ upon twenty years before, every whit as quiet, comfortable, and moderate
+ in price, indeed, one of the best provincial hotels of France. The dear
+ old woman then employed as waitress, had, of course, long since gone to
+ her rest, and the landlord and landlady were new to me. But, the
+ traditions of an excellent house were evidently kept up, accommodation,
+ meanwhile, having been greatly enlarged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A place is like a book; if worth knowing at all, to be returned to again
+ and again. After the first brief visit so many years ago, I wrote, &ldquo;I envy
+ the traveller who for the first time stands on the bridge of Nevers.&rdquo; And
+ more imposing, more exhilarating still, seemed the view from the same spot
+ now; under the brilliant sky, in the clear atmosphere, every feature
+ standing out as in a mosaic proudly dominating all, the Cathedral, with
+ its mass of sombre architecture; stretching wide to right and left, the
+ gay, prosperous-looking city; white villas rising one above the other,
+ hanging gardens and terraced lawns, making greenery and verdure in
+ mid-air. On the occasion of my first visit in August, 1881, the Loire was
+ so low as to appear a mere thread of palest blue amid white sands; at the
+ time I now write of, broad and beautiful it flowed beneath the noble
+ bridge, a deep twilight sky reflected in its limpid waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How well I remember the first sight of this scene years ago! Then it was
+ early morning of market day, and, pouring in from the country, I had met
+ crowds of peasants with their products, the men in blue blouses, the women
+ in neat white coiffes, some bearing huge baskets on their heads, others
+ drawing heavily laden barrows, driving donkey-carts, the piled-up fruit
+ and vegetables making a blaze of colour. For three sous I recorded the
+ purchase of more wild strawberries, peaches, and greengages than I knew
+ what to do with, each grower doing business on his own account, no
+ middleman to share his profits; choicest fruit and vegetables to be had
+ almost for the asking. On this lovely Sunday evening plenty of peasant
+ folk were about, the men fishing in the Loire, the women minding their
+ children under the trees. But I noted here, as elsewhere, a gradual
+ disappearance of the blue blouse and white coiffe. Broadcloth and bonnets
+ are fast superseding the homely, picturesque dress of former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aerial residences just mentioned are characteristic of riverside
+ Nevers. Craning our necks as we strolled to and fro, we remarked how much
+ life in such altitudes must resemble that of a balloon, folks being thus
+ lifted above the hubbub, malodours, and microbes of the human bee-hive
+ below. For my own part I prefer a turnpike level, despite the engaging
+ aspect of those rose-girt verandahs, bowers, and lawns on a level with the
+ cathedral tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevers makes a fine appearance, rising proudly from the Loire,&rdquo; wrote
+ Arthur Young, &ldquo;but on the first entrance it is like a thousand other
+ places.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the indefatigable apostle of the turnip had no time for archaeology on
+ his great tour, or he would have discovered that Nevers possesses more
+ than one architectural gem of the first water. The cathedral certainly,
+ alike without and within, must take rank after those of Chartres, Le Mans,
+ Reims, and how many others! but the exquisite little church of St. Étienne
+ and the Ducal Palace, are both perfect in their way, and will enchant all
+ lovers of harmony and proportion. The first, another specimen of so-called
+ Romanesque-Burgundian, has to be looked for, standing as it does in a kind
+ of <i>cul de sac</i>; the second occupies a conspicuous site, forms,
+ indeed, the centre-piece and crowning ornament of the town. Daintiest of
+ the dainty, this fairy-like Italian palace in the heart of France, reminds
+ us that once upon a time Nevers was the seat of Italian dukes, the last of
+ whom was a nephew of Mazarin. The great Cardinal, &ldquo;whose heart was more
+ French than his speech,&rdquo; and who served France so well, despite his
+ nationality and his nepotism, having purchased the Nivernais of a
+ Gonzague, finally incorporated it into the French crown in 1659.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this day, Nevers remains true to its Italian traditions. Go into the
+ tiniest suburban street, enter the poorest little general shop, and you
+ are reminded of the art that made the city famous hundreds of years ago,
+ an art introduced by a Duke of Mantua, relation of Catherine de Medicis.
+ It was in the sixteenth century, that this feudal lord of the Nivernais
+ summoned Italian potters hither, among these a native of Faenza. Under his
+ direction a manufactory of faïence was established, the ware resembling
+ that of his native city, scriptural and allegorical subjects traced in
+ manganese. The unrivalled blue glaze of Nevers is of later date. Just as
+ Rouen potters were celebrated for their reds, the Nivernais surpassed them
+ in blues. No French or foreign potters ever achieved an azure of equal
+ depth and purity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The golden age of Nevers majolica belongs to that early period, but the
+ highly ornamented faïence now produced in its ateliers, shows taste and
+ finish, and in the town itself may be found charming things as cheap as,
+ if not cheaper than, our commonest earthenware.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I write, I have before me some purchases made at a small general
+ dealer&rsquo;s, a plate, and two small amphora-shaped vases, costing a few sous
+ each. The colouring of this cheap pottery is very harmonious, and the
+ glaze remarkable for its brilliance. The shopwoman, with whom we had a
+ pleasant chat, did not seem astonished at our admiration for her goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sell lots of such things as you have just bought, to folks like you&rdquo; <i>(de
+ votre genre)</i>, she said, &ldquo;strangers who like to carry away a souvenir
+ of the place, and all my ware comes from the same manufacture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day Nevers thrives upon ornamental majolica. A hundred and ten years
+ ago it throve upon plates and dishes commemorating the Revolution. In the
+ upper storey of the Ducal Palace we may read revolutionary annals in
+ faïence, every event being memorialised by a piece of porcelain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curious enough is this record in earthenware, one stormy day after another
+ being thus commemorated; and perhaps more curious still is the evident
+ care with which these fragile objects have been preserved. Throughout the
+ Napoleonic era they might pass&mdash;had not gold pieces then on one side
+ the portrait of &ldquo;Napoleon Empereur,&rdquo; on the obverse &ldquo;République Français&rdquo;?&mdash;but
+ when Louis XVIII was brought back by his foreign friends, how was it that
+ there came no general smashing, a great flinging of revolutionary
+ potsherds to the dunghill? Safe enough now is the Nivernais collection,
+ under the roof of the Ducal Palace, the rude designs and commonness of the
+ ware strikingly contrasted with the exquisite things around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In close proximity to these cheap plates, dedicated to the Phrygian cap
+ and sans-culottism, are the very choicest specimens of Nevers faïence of
+ priceless value. Why the municipality, as a rule so generous towards the
+ public, should thus inconveniently house its treasure, is inconceivable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The museum is reached by a long spiral staircase, without banister or
+ support, and a false step must certainly result in a broken leg, or,
+ perhaps, neck! The room also contains a striking portrait of Theodore de
+ Bèze, the great French reformer, who, then an aged man, penned a letter,
+ sublime in its force and simplicity, to Henry IV., conjuring him not to
+ abandon the Protestant faith. The mention of this fact recalls an
+ interesting experience. I here allude to the incontestable advance of
+ Protestantism in France. The traveller whose acquaintance with the country
+ began a quarter of a century ago, cannot fail to be impressed with this
+ fact. Alike in towns large and small, new places of worship have sprung
+ up, Nevers now possessing an Evangelical church. And good was it to hear
+ the appreciation of the little Protestant community from my Catholic
+ landlady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the Protestants here are worthy of all respect (<i>dignes
+ gens</i>) and the pastor also; I esteem him much.&rdquo; Evidently the
+ Lemaitre-Coppée-Déroulède dictum, &ldquo;Only the Catholic can be called a
+ Frenchman,&rdquo; is not accepted at Nevers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In dazzlingly brilliant weather, and amid glowing scenery, we continued
+ our journey to Moulins, as we travelled by rail, and not by road unable to
+ identify &ldquo;the little opening in the road leading to a thicket&rdquo; where
+ Sterne discovered Maria. Has anyone ever identified the spot I wonder,
+ poplar, small brook and the rest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too soon were we also for &ldquo;the heyday of the vintage, when Nature is
+ pouring her abundance into everyone&rsquo;s lap.&rdquo; For the vintage, indeed, one
+ must go farther. Sterne must have been thinking of Burgundy when he penned
+ that line, or the phylloxera has brought about a transformation, vineyards
+ here being changed into pastures. The scenery of the Allier, like that
+ around Autun, recalls many parts of England. Meadows set around with
+ hedges; little rises of green hill here and there; cattle browsing by
+ quiet streams; just such pictures as we may see in our own Midlands. I
+ well remember a remark of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton on this
+ subject. We were strolling near his home, in the neighbourhood of Autun,
+ one day, when he pointed to the landscape over against us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How like that is to many an English scene,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and maybe it was
+ the English aspect of this region that tempted me to settle here.&rdquo; I had
+ paid Moulins a hasty visit many years before, but, unlike Nevers and so
+ many French towns, the <i>chef-lieu</i> of the Allier does not improve
+ upon further acquaintance. And I surmise, that such is the impression of
+ my country people generally. English travellers must be few and far
+ between at Moulins, or why should the appearance of two English ladies
+ attract so much curiosity? Wherever we went, the good folks of Moulins,
+ alike rich and poor, turned round to have a good look at us, even stopping
+ short to stare. All this was done without any rudeness or remark, but such
+ extraordinary behaviour can only be accounted for by the foregoing
+ supposition. For some reason or other our compatriots do not, like Sterne
+ and Maria go to Moulins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should an essentially aristocratic place be so ill-kept, not to say
+ dirty? The town is no centre of industry. Tall factory chimneys do not
+ disfigure its silhouette or blacken its walls. Handsome equipages enliven
+ the streets. But the municipality, like certain saints of old, seem to
+ have taken vows of perpetual uncleanliness. Alike the scavenger&rsquo;s broom
+ and the dust-cart appear to be unknown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst a riverside walk at Nevers presents nothing but cheerful bustle and
+ an aspect of prosperity, here you approach the Allier through scenes of
+ squalor and torpid neglect. The poorer inhabitants, too, are very
+ un-French in appearance, wanting that personal tidiness characteristic of
+ their country people in general. An aristocratic place, means an
+ Ultramontane place, and every third man you meet in Moulins wears a
+ soutane. What so many curés, Jesuits and Christian Brothers can find to do
+ passes the ordinary comprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However interesting twins may be in the human family, monumental duality
+ is far from successful. Unfortunately for this delightfully picturesque
+ old town, its graceful Cathedral has, in the grand new church of
+ Sacre-Coeur, a double. But&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;As moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ is the second self, the never to be obliterated shadow of the first and
+ far more beautiful church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two towers of equal height, twice two spires like as cherries and in close
+ juxtaposition rise above the town, an ensemble spoiling the symmetry of
+ outline and general effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much better off was Moulins when, instead of four spires, she gloried
+ in two? Then, of a verity, the city would have presented as noble a view
+ as those of La Charité and Nevers from the Loire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient château now used as a prison and the Jacquemart or clock tower
+ are rare old bits of architecture, of themselves worth the journey to
+ Moulins. Jacquemart, it may be here explained, is a corruption of Jacques
+ Marques, the name of a famous Flemish clockmaker who lived in the
+ fourteenth century. Amongst other achievements of this artist is the clock
+ of Nôtre Dame, Dijon, as curious in its way as the still more celebrated
+ cock-crowing time-piece of Strasburg, and declared by Froissart to be the
+ wonder of Christendom. World-wide became the reputation of Jacques
+ Marques, and thus it came about that clock towers generally were called
+ after his masterpieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my former hurried visit to Moulins, as was the case with my
+ predecessor, Arthur Young over a hundred years before, &ldquo;other occupations&rdquo;
+ had &ldquo;driven even Maria and the poplar from my head, and left me no room
+ for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.&rdquo; In other words, I had visited Rome
+ without seeing the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this second, and more leisurely visit, I had ample opportunity of
+ making up for the omission. Truly, the tomb of the last Montmorency
+ deserves a deliberate examination. It is one of the most sumptuous
+ monuments in the world and as a testimony of wifely devotion worthy to be
+ ranked with that of the Carian Queen to her lord, the Mausolus, whose name
+ is perpetuated in the word mausoleum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French history cannot be at everyone&rsquo;s fingers&rsquo; ends, so a word here about
+ the last of the Montmorencys, victim not so much of Richelieu&rsquo;s policy as
+ of a kinsman&rsquo;s meanness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the dashing, devil-me-care, hitherto fortunate Henri de Montmorency,
+ Marshal of France and Governor of Languedoc, plotted against Richelieu or
+ rather against the Royal supremacy, it was mainly at the instigation of
+ Gaston of Orleans. No more abject figure in French annals than this
+ unworthy son of the great Gascon, Henri IV., thus portrayed by one whose
+ tongue was as sharp as his sword: &ldquo;Gaston of Orleans,&rdquo; wrote Richelieu,
+ &ldquo;engaged in every enterprise because he had not the will to resist
+ persuasion, dishonourably drawing back from want of courage to support his
+ associates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the conspiracy of Montmorency, Gaston had played the part of
+ instigator, leaving the other to his fate as soon as the situation became
+ perilous. Every effort was made to save the duke, but in vain, and at the
+ age of thirty-seven he ended a brilliant, adventuresome life on the
+ scaffold at Toulouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thought was uppermost in my mind when, a few years ago, I visited that
+ city, the only French city that welcomed the Inquisition. As I stood in
+ the elegant Capitol, musing on Montmorency&rsquo;s story, it occurred to me how
+ few of us realise what a respecter of persons was French law under the
+ ancien régime. Hard as seems the fate of this dashing young duke, we must
+ remember what would have been his punishment, but for his titles of
+ nobility. Death swift and sudden, in other words, by decapitation, was the
+ choicest prerogative of the nobility; tortures before and after
+ condemnation, breaking on the wheel, burning alive, and other hideous
+ ends, being the lot of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This monument, so noteworthy alike from a historic and artistic point of
+ view, was saved from destruction by ready wit. When, in the ferment of
+ revolution, the iconoclastic spirit had got the upper hand, a citizen of
+ Moulins met a mob, bent on destroying what they supposed to be the tomb of
+ some hated grand seigneur, oppressor of the poor. Following the rabble to
+ the convent, no sooner did he see the mallet and hammer raised than this
+ worthy bourgeois, who himself deserves a monument, shouted, &ldquo;Hands off,
+ citizens! Yonder reposes no aristocrat, but as good a citizen as any
+ man-jack of you, aye, who had the honour of losing his head for having
+ conspired against a King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd melted away without a word, the monument remains intact, and
+ generations have had bequeathed to them an example of what presence of
+ mind may effect, not with nerve, sinew, or bodily prowess, but with the
+ tongue. The Convent of the Visitation, to which Montmorency&rsquo;s widow
+ retired, and in the chapel of which she raised this memorial, is now
+ converted into a Lycée. It is a handsome building and was built by Madame
+ de Chantal, foundress of the Order of Visitadines, or nuns whose office it
+ was to visit the sick. This pious lady, the friend of St. François de
+ Sales, and herself canonised by Pope Benoît XIV., was the bosom friend of
+ Felicia Orsini, Montmorency&rsquo;s wife, who succeeded her as Superior of the
+ convent on her death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even an abbess, who had taken the veil, could not refuse visits, some
+ of which must have been as a second entering of iron into this proud
+ woman&rsquo;s soul. The coward Gaston, when passing through Moulins, sought an
+ interview. Richelieu, also, whose emissary received the following message:
+ &ldquo;Tell your master, that my tears reply for me and that I am his humble
+ servant.&rdquo; Years after, Louis XIV. visited the once beautiful and
+ high-spirited Italian, now an aged abbess occupying a bare cell and from
+ his lips, despot and voluptuary though he was, might always be expected
+ the right word in the right place. &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said, on taking leave, &ldquo;we
+ may learn something here. I need not ask you to pray for the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: TOMB OF MONTMORENCY, MOULINS.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But interest in personalities is leading me from what I have set myself to
+ describe, namely, portraiture in marble. For this magnificent work thus
+ perpetuates the last of the Montmorencys and his wife as they were when
+ separated for ever in their prime. Imposing although the monument is as a
+ whole, these two figures in white marble, standing out against a dark
+ background, engross attention. The entire work covers the wall behind the
+ high altar, the sculptures being in pure white marble, the framework in
+ black. Dismissing the niched Mars and Hercules on the one side, the
+ allegorised Religion and Charity on the other, we study the central
+ figures both offering interest of quite different kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why a dashing soldier and courtier of the Renaissance should be
+ represented in the guise of a Roman warrior, is an anomaly, irreconcilable
+ as that of pagan gods and the personification of Christian attributes here
+ placed vis-à-vis. Perhaps the grief-stricken wife, who was, as it appears,
+ of a highly romantic and adventuresome turn, wished thus to commemorate
+ the heroic qualities of her husband; she might also have wished to
+ dissociate him altogether from his own time, a period of which, in her
+ eyes, he would be the victim. Be this as it may, the Roman undress and
+ accoutrements do not harmonise with a physiognomy essentially French and
+ French of a given epoch. Whilst the interest aroused by the Duchess&rsquo;s
+ effigy is purely artistic, that of her husband excites curiosity rather
+ than admiration. The head is strangely poised, much as if the artist
+ intended to suggest the fact of decapitation; obliquity of vision, a
+ defect hereditary in the Montmorencys, is also indicated, adding
+ singularity. The half-recumbent figure by the Duke&rsquo;s side, is of rare
+ pathos and beauty. Almost angelic in its resignation and religious fervour
+ is the upturned face. The drapery, too, shows classic grace and
+ simplicity, as strongly contrasted with the martial travesty opposite as
+ are the two countenances in expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long will art-lovers linger before this monument raised by wifely
+ devotion, a monument, with so many another, perpetuating rather the
+ devotion of the survivor than claims on posterity of the dead. And let not
+ hasty travellers follow Arthur Young&rsquo;s example, jotting down, after a
+ visit to Moulins, &ldquo;No room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. &mdash; SOUVIGNY AND SENS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A quarter of an hour by rail, an hour and a quarter by road, from Moulins
+ lies Souvigny, the cradle of the Bourbons, and as interesting and
+ delightful a little excursion as travellers can desire. On a glowing
+ September morning the scenery of the Allier looked its very best. Never as
+ long as I live shall I forget the beauty of that drive. Lightest,
+ loveliest cumuli floated athwart a pure, not too dazzlingly blue sky,
+ before us stretched avenue after avenue of poplar or plane trees,
+ veritable aisles of green letting in the azure, reminding me of the famous
+ Hobbema in our National Gallery. At many points the landscape recalled our
+ native land; but for the white oxen of the Morvan, we might have fancied
+ ourselves in Sussex or the Midlands. And cloudage, to borrow an expression
+ of Coleridge, suggested England, too. Clouds and skies of the Midlands,
+ none more poetic or pictorial throughout England seemed here&mdash;those
+ skies above the vast sweeps of undulating chalk having a peculiar depth
+ and tenderness, the clouds a marvellous brilliance, transparence, and
+ variety of form! So beautiful are those cloud-pictures that we hardly
+ needed beauty below. Here on the road to Moulins we had both, the
+ landscape, if not romantic or striking, being rich in pastoral charm.
+ Arthur Young, who looked at every bit of country first and foremost from
+ the farmer&rsquo;s point of view, was so much struck with the neighbourhood of
+ Moulins that, but for the Revolution, he would very probably have become a
+ French landowner. Just eight miles from the city he visited in August,
+ 1789, an estate was offered for sale by its possessor, the Marquis de
+ Goutte. &ldquo;The finest climate in France, perhaps in Europe,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;a
+ beautiful and healthy country, excellent roads, and navigation to Paris;
+ wine, game, fish, and everything appears on the table except the produce
+ of the tropics; a good house, a fine garden, with ready markets for every
+ kind of produce; and, above all the rest, three thousand acres of enclosed
+ land, capable in a very little time of being, without expense, quadrupled
+ in its produce&mdash;altogether formed a picture sufficient to tempt a man
+ who had been twenty-five years in the constant practice of husbandry
+ adapted to the soil.&rdquo; The price of the whole was only thirteen thousand
+ and odd pounds, and the seller took care to explain that &ldquo;all seigneurial
+ rights <i>haute justice</i>&rdquo; (that is to say, the privilege of hanging
+ poachers, and others, at the château gates), were included in the purchase
+ money. But the country was already in a ferment, and had our countryman
+ struck a bargain then and there, the last-named extras would have proved a
+ dead letter. Seigneurial rights were being abolished, or rather
+ surrendered, at the very time that this transaction was under
+ consideration. As Arthur Young tells us, he might as well have asked for
+ an elephant at Moulins as for a newspaper. No one knew, or apparently
+ cared to know, what was taking place in Paris. On asking his landlady for
+ a newspaper, she replied she had none, they were too dear. Whereupon the
+ irate traveller wrote down in his diary: &ldquo;it is a great pity that there is
+ not a camp of <i>brigands</i> in your coffee room, Madame Bourgeau.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This part of France is not a region of prosperous peasant farmers, nor is
+ it a chess-board of tiny crops, the four or five acre freeholds of small
+ owners cut up into miniature fields. I had a long talk with a countryman,
+ and he informed me that, as in Arthur Young&rsquo;s time, the land belongs to
+ large owners, and is still, as in his time, cultivated by <i>métayers</i>
+ on the half-profit system. At the present day, however, another class has
+ sprung up, that of tenant farmers on a considerable scale; these, in their
+ turn, sublet to peasants who give their labour and with whom they divide
+ the profits. Now, the half-profit system does certainly answer elsewhere;
+ in the Indre, for example, it has proved a stepping-stone to the position
+ of small capitalist. Here I learned, with regret, that such is not the
+ case. Land, even in the highly-favoured Allier, cannot afford a triple
+ revenue. In the Indre, on the contrary, there is no intermediary between
+ land-owners and <i>métayers</i>, the former even selling small holdings to
+ their labourers as soon as they have saved a little capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; folks are not prosperous hereabouts,&rdquo; said my informant. &ldquo;There are
+ no manufacturers at Moulins to enrich the people, and, what with high
+ rents and low prices, the half-profit system does not pay. If money is
+ made, it is by the tenant-farmer, not by the <i>métayer</i>.&rdquo; Curious and
+ instructive is the fact that the most Catholic and aristocratic centres in
+ France should often be the poorest; Moulins and the Allier afford but one
+ example out of many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A beautiful drive of an hour and a quarter brought us within sight of
+ Souvigny. Towering above the bright landscape rose the Abbey Church, its
+ sober dun, red and brown hues, the quaint houses of similar colour huddled
+ around it, contrasted with the dazzling brightness of sky and verdure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still more striking the contrast between the pile so majestic and
+ surroundings so homely! Here, as at La Charité, nothing is in keeping with
+ the mass of architecture, which, in its apogee, stood for the town itself,
+ what of town, indeed, there was being the merest accessory, inevitable but
+ unimposing entourage, growing up bit by bit. The present population of
+ Souvigny is something over three thousand, doubtless, as in the case of La
+ Charité, less than that of its former monastery and dependencies. As we
+ wind upwards, thus flanking the town and abbey, we realise the superb
+ position of this cradle and mausoleum of the Bourbons. For Souvigny was
+ both. Two thousand and odd years ago, here, in the very heart of France,
+ Adhémar, a brave soldier, nothing more, became the first &ldquo;Sire de
+ Bourbon,&rdquo; Charles le Simple having given him the fief of Bourbon as a
+ reward for military services, its chief establishing himself at Souvigny,
+ and of course founding a religious house. The Benedictine abbey, being
+ enriched with the bones of two saints, former Abbots of Cluny, became a
+ famous pilgrimage. Adhémar&rsquo;s successors transferred their seat of
+ seigneurial government to Bourbon l&rsquo;Archimbault, but for centuries here
+ they found their last resting-place, and here they are commemorated in
+ marble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indescribably picturesque is this whilom capital of the tiny feudal
+ kingdom; topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, coated of many colours are its
+ zig-zag little streets, one house tumbling on the back of its neighbour,
+ another having contrived to wedge itself between two of portlier bulk, a
+ third coolly taking possession of some inviting frontage, shutting out its
+ fellow&rsquo;s light, air, and sunshine; here, meeting the eye, breakneck alley,
+ there aerial terrace, and on all sides architectural reminders of the
+ Souvigny passed away, the Souvigny once so splendid and important, now
+ reduced to nothingness, as is, politically speaking, the so-called House
+ of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbey Church, like that of La Charité, shows a mixture of many styles,
+ the general effect being magnificent in the extreme. Throughout eastern
+ France you find no more imposing façade. But, as observes M. Emile
+ Montégut, in the work before quoted, the church has been created as Nature
+ creates a soil, each age contributing its layer; Byzantine, Roman, Gothic,
+ each style is here seen, the latter in its purity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the church itself stands taut and trim, a mass of sculptured
+ masonry in rich browns and reds, the interior shows melancholy
+ dilapidation. But, indeed, for the stern lessons of history, how sad were
+ the spectacle of these mutilated effigies in marble, exquisite sculptures
+ when fresh from the artist&rsquo;s hand, to-day torsos so hideously hacked and
+ hewn as hardly to look human! We cannot, however, forget that the history
+ of races, as of nations and individuals, is retributive. When the
+ &lsquo;Roi-Soleil,&rsquo; that incarnation of the Bourbon spirit, was so inflated with
+ his own personality as to forbid the erection of any statue throughout
+ France but his own, he paved the way for the revolutionary iconoclasts of
+ a century later. It was simply a recurrence of the old fatality, the
+ inevitable moral, since History began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For here, defaced to such a point that sculptures they can be called no
+ longer, are memorialised not only Louis XIV.&lsquo;s ancestors, but his
+ offspring, namely, Louise Marie, one of his seven children by Madame de
+ Montespan, all, as we know, with those of Madame de la Vallière,
+ legitimised, ennobled and enriched. Pierre de Beaujeu, husband of the
+ great Anne of France, was also buried here. Anne it was who, on the death
+ of Louis XI., governed France with all her father&rsquo;s astuteness, but
+ without his cruelty, and pleasant and comforting it is to find that Duke
+ Pierre, her husband, seconded her in every way, himself remaining in the
+ background, acting to perfection the difficult rôle of Prince Consort. The
+ sight of these once exquisite marbles may perhaps awaken in other minds
+ the reflection that crossed my own. Heretical as I shall seem, I venture
+ to express the opinion, that in such cases one of two courses are
+ advisable, either the removal of the torsos, or restoration; why should
+ not some genius be able in this field to do what Viollet le Duc has so
+ successfully achieved in another? But for that great architect, the
+ cathedral of Moulins&mdash;and how many other beautiful French churches?&mdash;would
+ long ago have tumbled to pieces, been handed over as storage to corn
+ merchants, or brewers! Is it so much more difficult to restore a marble
+ effigy, whether of human being or animal, than a façade or an altar-piece?
+ If impossible, then, I say, let broken marbles like those of Souvigny be
+ hidden from view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agreeable town of Sens on the Yonne is here described for
+ completeness&rsquo; sake. Although not lying in the Bourbonnais, Sens formed the
+ last stage of our little tour in this direction, a direct line of railway
+ connecting the town with Moulins. What a change we found here! Instead of
+ unswept, malodorous streets, and sordid riverside quarters, all was clean,
+ trim, and cared for, one wholly uncommon feature lending especial charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the tutelar goddess of Sens, benignant genius presiding over the city,
+ is a stream, or rather parent of many streams, that water the streets of
+ their own free will, supplying thirsty beasts with copious draughts in
+ torrid weather, and keeping up a perpetual air of rusticity and coolness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wherever you go you are followed by the musical ripple of these runlets,
+ purling brooks so crystalline that you are tempted to look for
+ forget-me-nots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voluntariness of this street watering constitutes its witchery. Post
+ haste flows each tiny course; not having a moment to spare seems every
+ current. Need we wonder at the fabled Arethusas and Sabrinas of more
+ youthful worlds?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of itself Sens is very engaging. We can easily understand the fact of the
+ late Mr. Hamerton having made his first French home here. In the memoir of
+ her husband, affixed to his autobiography, Mrs. Hamerton gives us
+ particulars, not only of individual, but of super-personal interest. I use
+ the last expression because the idiosyncrasy described is common to most
+ men and women of genius or exceptional talent. The charming essayist then,
+ the art-critic, gifted with so much insight and feeling settled down at
+ Sens we are told, for the purpose of painting &lsquo;commission pictures.&rsquo; His
+ career was to be decided by the brush and not by the pen. The author of
+ &ldquo;The Intellectual Life,&rdquo; with how many other works of distinction, had, at
+ the outset, wholly mistaken his vocation. &ldquo;The first thing considered by
+ Gilbert when he settled at Sens,&rdquo; writes Mrs. Hamerton, &ldquo;was the choice of
+ subjects for his commission pictures, which he intended to paint directly
+ from nature; and he soon selected panoramic views from the top of a
+ vine-clad hill, called Saint Bon, which commands an extensive view of the
+ river Yonne, and of the plains about it.&rdquo; Unfortunately, rather we should
+ say fortunately, anyhow, for the reading world, the &lsquo;commission pictures&rsquo;
+ were declined. The disappointed artist, out of humour with Sens, made a
+ series of journeys in search of an ideal home, the result being that most
+ entertaining and successful book, &ldquo;Round My House,&rdquo; and the final devotion
+ of its author to letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sens might well seem an ideal place of abode to many. Formed from the
+ ancient Province of Burgundy, the Department of the Yonne has the charm of
+ Burgundian scenery, with the addition of a wide, lovely river. All
+ travellers on the Lyons-Marseilles Railway will recall the noble
+ appearance of the town from the railway&mdash;the Cathedral, with its one
+ lofty tower, rising above grey roofs, no factory chimneys marring the
+ outline, and, between bright stretches of country, the Yonne, not least
+ enchanting of French rivers, if not the most striking or romantic, perhaps
+ the sweetest and most soothing in the world. The favourable impression of
+ Sens gained by this fleeting view, is more than justified on nearer
+ acquaintance. The Cathedral, externally less imposing than those of
+ Bourges, Rheims, or even Rodez and Beauvais, is of a piece alike without
+ and within, no tasteless excrescence disfiguring its outer walls, little
+ or no modern tawdriness to be seen inside, an architectural gem of great
+ purity. For the curious in such matters, the sacristy offers many wonders,
+ among others a large fragment of the true cross, presented to Sens by
+ Charlemagne. Less apocryphal are the vestments of our own Archbishop
+ Thomas, alb, girdle, stole, and the rest, all most carefully preserved and
+ exhibited in a glass case. It will be remembered that, when the turbulent
+ Thomas of London, afterwards known as Becket, was condemned as a traitor,
+ he fled to France. &ldquo;This is a fearful day,&rdquo; said one of his attendants on
+ hearing the sentence. &ldquo;The Day of Judgment will be more fearful,&rdquo; replied
+ Thomas. It was not at Sens, however, that the refugee took up his abode,
+ but in the Abbey of St. Colombe, now in ruins hard by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side of the bridge, crowning an islet, stands one of those
+ curious church<i>lets</i>, or churc<i>lings</i> I was about to say, that
+ possess so powerful a fascination for the archaeological mind.
+ Particularly striking was the little Romanesque interior in the September
+ twilight, a picturesque group of Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul,
+ rehearsing canticles with their pupils at one end, the subdued light just
+ enabling us to realise the harmony of proportions. This little church of
+ St. Maurice dating from the twelfth century, partly restored in the
+ sixteenth, must not on any account be missed. Its pretty spire crowns the
+ Isle d&rsquo;Yonne, or island of the Yonne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Late and tired, I arrived, one September evening, at Arcis-sur-Aube,
+ birthplace and home of the great Danton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had brought with me letters of introduction to friends&rsquo; friends, unaware
+ that at such a moment the sign-manual of the President of the Republic
+ himself would hardly have secured me a night&rsquo;s lodging. For at this
+ especial moment the little town, from end to end, was in the possession of
+ the military headquarters of that year&rsquo;s manoeuvres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every private dwelling showed a notice of the officers in command
+ sheltered under its roof. Here and there, the presence of sentinels
+ indicated the location of generals. The hotels were crowded from basement
+ to attic, folks who let lodgings for hire had made bargains long before,
+ whilst the very poorest made up beds, or turned out of their own, to
+ accommodate the rank and file. At the extreme end of the town, close to
+ the ancestral home of the Dantons, stands the straggling old-fashioned
+ Hôtel de la Poste, a hostelry, I should suppose, not in the least changed
+ since the days of the great conventionnel. All here was bustle and
+ excitement. Mine host was spitting game in the kitchen, and could hardly
+ find time to answer my application; soldiers and officers&rsquo; servants,
+ scullions and men of all-work, almost knocked each other down in the
+ inn-yard, the landlady, generally so affable a personage in provincial
+ France, gave me the cold shoulder. I turned out in the forlorn hope of
+ finding a good Samaritan. Of course, to present a letter of introduction
+ under such circumstances, was quite out of the question, my errand would
+ have been the last hair to break the camel&rsquo;s back, final embarrassment of
+ an already overdone hostess. But night was at hand; the last train to
+ Troyes, the nearest town, had gone, no other would pass through
+ Arcis-sur-Aube until the small hours of the morning. Unless I could
+ procure a room, therefore, I should be in the position of a homeless
+ vagrant. Well, not to be dismayed, I set out making inquiries right and
+ left, to my astonishment being rebuffed rather surlily and with looks of
+ suspicion. The fact is, during these manoeuvres, a lady arriving at
+ head-quarters alone is apt to be looked upon with no favourable eye.
+ Especially do people wonder what on earth can bring a foreigner to an out
+ of the way country place at such a time&mdash;she must surely be a spy,
+ pickpocket or something worse!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After having vainly made inquiries to no purpose along the principal
+ street, I turned into a grocer&rsquo;s shop in a smaller thoroughfare; two young
+ assistants were chatting without anything to do, and they looked so
+ good-natured that I entered and begged them to help me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very likely an English hobbledehoy similarly appealed to would have
+ blushed, giggled, and got rid of the stranger as quickly as possible;
+ French youths of all ranks have rather more of the man of the world in
+ them. The elder of the lads became at once interested in my case, and
+ manifested a keen desire to be serviceable. Hailing a little girl from
+ without, he bade her conduct me to a certain Mademoiselle D&mdash;&mdash;
+ who let rooms and might have one vacant. The little maid, fetching a
+ companion to accompany us&mdash;here also was a French trait; whatever is
+ done, must be done sociably&mdash;took me to the address given; the
+ demoiselle in question was, however, not at home, but the concierge said
+ that, another demoiselle living near would probably be able to accommodate
+ me, which she did. Before I proceed with my narrative, however, I must
+ mention the ill fortune that befell my useful little cicerone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On taking leave I had given her half a franc, a modest recompense enough
+ as I thought. The following story would seem to show that the good people
+ of Arcis have not yet become imbued with modern ideas about money, also
+ that they have a high notion of the value of truth. To my dismay I learnt
+ next morning that the poor little girl had been soundly slapped, her
+ mother refusing to believe that she had come honestly by so much money; as
+ my hostess observed, the good woman might at least have waited for
+ corroboration of the child&rsquo;s statement. A box of chocolate, transmitted by
+ a third hand, I have no doubt acted as a consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear kind mademoiselle Jenny M&mdash;&mdash; How warmly she welcomed me to
+ her homely hearth! My little purple rosette, insignia of an officer of
+ Public Instruction of France, proved a bond of union. This excellent woman
+ was the daughter of a schoolmaster who had himself worn the academic
+ ribbon, a French schoolmaster&rsquo;s crowning ambition. He had left his
+ daughter, in comfortable circumstances, that is to say, she enjoyed an
+ annuity of £40 a year, the possession of a large, roomy house, part of
+ which she let, and half an acre of garden full as it could be of flowers,
+ fruit and vegetables. We at once became excellent friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am very sorry that my best bedroom is given up to
+ soldiers, two poor young fellows I took in the other night out of
+ compassion. You can, however, have the little back room looking on to the
+ garden, it is rather in disorder, but you will find the bed comfortable. I
+ cannot offer to do much for you in the way of waiting, having a lame foot,
+ but a woman brings me milk early in the morning and she shall put a cupful
+ outside your door; bread and butter you will find in the little kitchen
+ next to your room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured her that such an arrangement would suit me very well, as I had
+ my own spirit lamp and could make tea for myself; then we went downstairs.
+ The great difficulty that night was to get anything to eat. The soldiers
+ had eaten every body out of house and home, she assured me there was not
+ such a thing as a chop or an egg to be had in the town for love or money.
+ Fortunately, I had the remains of a cold chicken in my lunch basket, and
+ this did duty for supper, my hostess pressing upon me some excellent
+ Bordeaux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we chatted, she mentioned the fact that two or three friends, much in
+ the same situation as herself, occupied the little houses running
+ alongside her garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are all old maids,&rdquo; she informed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old maids,&rdquo; quoth I, &ldquo;how is that? I thought there were no single women
+ out of convents in France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The thing,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;has come about in this way&mdash;we have all
+ enough to live upon, and so many women worsen their condition by marriage,
+ instead of bettering it, that we made up our minds to live comfortably on
+ what we have got, and not trouble our heads about the men. We live very
+ happily together, and are all socialists, radicals, <i>libres penseuses</i>
+ and the rest. We read a great deal, and, as you will see to-morrow, my
+ father left me a good library.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we sat at table in the somewhat untidy kitchen, my fellow guests, the
+ conscripts, came in, they were pleasant, civil young fellows belonging to
+ different classes of life. One was a middle-class civilian from an
+ industrial city of the north, the other a homely peasant, son of the soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These conscripts, however poorly fed in barracks, fare like aldermen
+ during these manoeuvres, everybody giving them to eat and drink of their
+ best. They had just dined plentifully, but for all that, managed to get
+ down a bumper of wine immediately offered by Mademoiselle Jenny; a hunk of
+ Dijon gingerbread they did evidently find some difficulty in getting
+ through. We toasted each other in friendliest fashion, and the civilian,
+ out of compliment to myself, drank to the health of the English army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning I fared no less sumptuously than a soldier during the
+ manoeuvres. A savoury steam had announced game for our mid-day meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said my hostess, as she dished up and began to carve a fat
+ partridge cooked to a turn&mdash;&ldquo;this bird that came so àpropos, is a
+ present from a great-nephew of Danton. He is the <i>juge de paix</i> here
+ and a good neighbour of mine. We will pay him a visit this afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this gentleman, of Danton&rsquo;s home and family, I shall say something
+ later on. We made a round of visits that day, but the <i>juge de paix</i>,
+ who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country
+ in search of more partridges. Other friends and acquaintances we found at
+ home; among these was a retired confectioner, who had once kept a shop in
+ Regent Street, and had told Mademoiselle Jenny that she would be delighted
+ to talk English with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Warmly welcomed I was by the portly, prosperous looking pastry-cook, who
+ was reading a newspaper and smoking a cigarette in a well-furnished,
+ comfortable parlour. But alas! thirty years had elapsed since his
+ departure from England, and during the interval he had never once
+ interchanged a word with any of my country-people. To his intense
+ mortification, he had completely lost hold of the English tongue! Another
+ acquaintance, an elderly woman, who seemed to be living on small
+ independent means, had a curious house pet. This, once a pretty little
+ frisking lamb, had now reached the proportions of a big fat sheep. So
+ docile and affectionate, however, was the animal, and so attached had the
+ good soul become to it, that a pet it seemed likely to remain to the end
+ of its days; the creature followed its mistress about like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little town of Arcis-sur-Aube, like many another, is now deserted by
+ all who can get to livelier and more bustling centres. Tanneries, vest,
+ stocking and glove weaving and stitching, are the only resources of the
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During my stay, I made the acquaintance of a charming family engaged in
+ the latter trade. Stopping one day in front of a weaver&rsquo;s open door to
+ watch him at work, I was cordially invited to enter. The head of the
+ house, one of those quiet, intelligent, dignified artisans so typical of
+ his class in France, was weaving vest sleeves at a hand loom, just as I
+ had seen, at St. Étienne, ribbon weavers pursuing their avocations at
+ home. As we chatted about his handicraft and its modest emoluments, his
+ little son came in from school, a bright lad who, to his father&rsquo;s delight,
+ had lately gained prizes. It is curious that only one part of a vest,
+ stocking or glove is done by a single hand; some goods I found came to
+ this house to be finished and others were sent away to be made ready for
+ sale elsewhere. By-and-by, a pretty, refined girl, the daughter of the
+ house, came in and asked me if I would like to see what she was doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith she took me to a neat, cheerful little room upstairs overlooking
+ a garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a table by the open window was a hand-sewing machine, and her
+ occupation was the ornamental stitching of silk and cotton gloves by
+ machinery. The pay seemed excessively low I thought, I believe something
+ like twopence per dozen pair, but the young machinist seemed perfectly
+ contented and happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is pleasant,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to be able to earn something at home and to
+ live with papa and mamma and my little brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving, with the prettiest grace in the world, she begged my
+ acceptance of a dainty pair of lavender silk gloves knitted by her own
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some day I hope to revisit Arcis-sur-Aube, and meantime I hold occasional
+ intercourse by post with my friends in Danton&rsquo;s town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But by far the most interesting acquaintance at this most historic little
+ town was the great-nephew of Danton. Middle-aged, unpretentious of aspect,
+ yet with that unmistakable look partly of dignified self-possession,
+ partly of authority, seldom absent from the French official, I looked in
+ vain for any likeness to the portraits of his great kinsman. Yet perhaps
+ in the stalwart figure, manly proportions and bronzed complexion, might be
+ traced some suggestion of the athlete, the strong swimmer, the bold
+ sportsman, whose mighty voice once made Europe tremble. The brother of
+ this gentleman also lived at Arcis-sur-Aube, but was absent during my
+ visit. The <i>juge de paix</i> and his family were on friendliest terms
+ with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a chat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From him and other residents I gathered some interesting particulars about
+ the Danton family. The great tribune left two little sons, George and
+ Antoine, who grew up and resided in their ancestral home, hiding
+ themselves from the world. Their young step-mother it was whose memory,
+ when on the way to the guillotine, evoked from Danton the only betrayal of
+ personal emotion throughout his stormy career: &ldquo;Must I leave thee for
+ ever, my beloved,&rdquo; then, quickly recovering himself, cried &ldquo;Danton, no
+ weakness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Danton married again and is lost sight of. One of Danton&rsquo;s sisters
+ entered a convent, as it was supposed hoping to expiate by a life given up
+ to prayer the crimes, as she deemed them, of her brother. Meantime,
+ appalled by the shadow of their father&rsquo;s memory, George and Antoine
+ decided to remain celibate, a pair marked out for solitude and obloquy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let the name of Danton perish from the recollection of man,&rdquo; they said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder, however, afterwards acknowledged and, I believe, legitimised a
+ daughter according to the merciful French law. Mademoiselle Danton became
+ Madame Menuel, and, strange as it may seem, at the time of my visit, this
+ direct descendant of Danton was still living. President Carnot had given
+ her a small pension in the form of a <i>bureau de tabac</i> at Troyes,
+ where she died in 1896, leaving a son, who some years ago was divorced
+ from his wife, emigrated to Buenos Ayres, and has never been heard of
+ since. It is supposed that he is dead. The two great-nephews have each a
+ son and a daughter living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>juge de paix</i> and his brother are now among the most respected
+ citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their
+ great ancestor. Neither of the pair inhabit the house in which Danton was
+ born, and to which he ever returned with joy and satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sight of Danton&rsquo;s house is sufficient to disprove the calumnies of that
+ noble woman, but inveterate hater, Madame Roland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From her memoirs we might gather that Danton was a poverty-stricken,
+ pettifogging lawyer of the basest class. That Danton&rsquo;s family belong to
+ the well-to-do upper middle ranks, we see from the object lesson before
+ us. At the time of my visit, this large, roomy, well-built house, with
+ coach-house, stables and half-a-dozen acres of garden, orchard and wood,
+ was to let for 700 francs a year. But so low a rent now-a-days is no
+ indication of its value a hundred years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: DANTON&rsquo;S HOME AT ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The owner of the house most kindly showed me over every part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is two-storeyed, plainly but solidly constructed, and evidently
+ arranged, according to French fashion, for a combined tenancy. Two or
+ three families could here well be accommodated under the same roof, each
+ having separate establishments. I found myself in a covered carriageway,
+ cool dark corridors leading to outhouses and stables, a wide staircase
+ with handsome oak balustrade to upstair kitchen and bed-chambers, on
+ either side of the ground floor were spacious salon and dining room,
+ fronting town and river, water-mills and quays. In the vast kitchen was an
+ enormous chopping block, suggestive of large family joints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My kind cicerone allowed me to linger in Danton&rsquo;s bed-chamber. I now
+ looked out from the window at which the fallen leader was often seen by
+ his townsfolk during the last days of his stormy career. In his night-cap
+ the colossal figure might be descried gazing out into the night, as if
+ peering into futurity, trying to read the future. Did he perhaps from time
+ to time waver in his decision to abide his doom? We know that again and
+ again his friends urged him to seek safety in flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does a man carry his country on the sole of his shoe?&rdquo; he retorted
+ fiercely, but it may well be that he here envied weaker men. Danton&rsquo;s
+ character was thoroughly French. His ambition was as he said to retire to
+ Arcis-sur-Aube and there plant cabbages. A devoted son, husband and
+ father, his affections were also centred upon others not of his blood and
+ name. He tenderly loved his old nurse, and left her a small pension.
+ Within the last thirty years, thanks to M. Aulard and his collaborators,
+ the history of the Revolution has been written anew, or rather for the
+ first time. The gigantic figure of Danton stands forth to-day in its true
+ light, as the saviour of France from the fate of Poland, and as a founder
+ of the democratic idea. He succumbed less because he was a rival of
+ Robespierre than because he was a friend of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would rather be guillotined than guillotine,&rdquo; he repeated, and it was
+ mainly his effort to stay the Terror that made him its victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The study adjoining contained that suggestive library of English, Spanish,
+ Italian, and ancient classics of which his biographers have given us a
+ catalogue, but which are now, alas! dispersed for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house stands conspicuous, rearing a proud front to the world, if world
+ could be used appropriately of so quiet, humdrum a little place. A few
+ hundred yards off we reach the Church, Hôtel de Ville and open square. In
+ 1886, a monument to Danton was inaugurated here with much ceremony. A
+ bronze statue represents the great tribune in the fiery attitude of an
+ orator, pronouncing his immortal phrase:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>&ldquo;De l&rsquo;audace, encore de l&rsquo;audace, toujours de l&rsquo;audace!&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arcis-sur-Aube is a little town of three thousand souls, within an hour&rsquo;s
+ railway journey from Troyes. The river Aube (Alba), so called from its
+ silveriness flows by Danton&rsquo;s house. In his time and up to the opening of
+ the railways the place was a port of some importance. Boats and barges
+ carried goods to Troyes, Bar-sur-Aube and other towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of late years Arcis has been partially surrounded with pleasant shady
+ walks greatly appreciated by the townsfolk. Regretfully I quitted my
+ circle of acquaintances here, little dreaming under what interesting
+ circumstances I should next meet Danton&rsquo;s great-nephew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. &mdash; RHEIMS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The grandest of all the grand cathedrals in France has been so fully
+ described elsewhere, that I will not attempt to do justice to the subject
+ myself. During one of my numerous visits to Rheims, however, it was my
+ good fortune to enjoy a very rare experience. On the occasion of President
+ Faure&rsquo;s funeral, the great <i>bourdon</i> or bell, formerly only tolled
+ for the death of monarchs, was now heard for the second time during the
+ Third Republic. Standing under the shadow of that vast minster the sound
+ seemed to come from east and west, from above and below, dwarfing the hum
+ of the city to nothingness, as if echoing from the remotest corners of
+ France. It was no heroic figure now knelled by the deepest-voiced bell in
+ the country, but in the person of the Havre tanner raised to the dignity
+ of a ruler, was embodied a magnificent idea, the sovereignty of the people
+ and the overthrow of privilege. Never as long as I live shall I forget the
+ boom of that great bell, and long the solemn sound lingered on my ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later the interior of the vast Cathedral echoed with sound
+ almost as overwhelming in its force and solemnity. A grand mass was given
+ in honour of the dead President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the high altar stood a lofty catafalque, the rich purple
+ drapery blazing with gold. The nave was filled with dazzling uniforms and
+ embroidered vestments. In especially reserved seats sat the officers of
+ the Legion of Honour, among these in civilian dress figuring the honoured
+ citizen of Rheims who has ever retained English nationality, Mr. Jonathan
+ Holden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What with beating drums, clashing cymbals, blaring trumpets and pealing
+ organ, the tremendous vault seemed hardly capacious enough for the
+ deafening combination of sound. As a relief came the funeral march of
+ Chopin, the more subdued strains seeming almost inaudible after the tumult
+ of the moment before. Never surely had plebeian requiem so imperial!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rich, artistic and archaeological treasures of Rheims are well known.
+ I will now describe one or two sights which do not come in the way of the
+ tourist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these is the so-called &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; or associated home for
+ people of small means. The handsome building, with its large grounds,
+ accommodating three hundred tenants, is neither a hotel nor a boarding
+ establishment, least of all an almshouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under municipal patronage and support the &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; offers
+ rooms, board, attendance, laundress and even a small plot of garden for
+ the annual sum of £16 to £24 per inmate, the second sum procuring larger
+ rooms and more liberal fare. Personal independence is absolutely
+ unhampered except by the fact that the lodge gate is closed at 10 p.m. As
+ most of the tenants of the home are elderly folks, such a rule is no
+ hardship. One great advantage of the system is the protection thus
+ afforded to single women and old people, and the immunity from household
+ cares. Meals are taken in common, but otherwise intercourse is voluntary.
+ The French temperament is so sociable, however, and chat is such a
+ necessity of existence, that we saw many groups on garden benches, and
+ also in the recreation and reading rooms. When the number of small <i>rentiers</i>
+ is considered, i.e., men and women of the middle-class living upon a
+ minimum income, we can understand the usefulness of this home. I learned
+ that the establishment is self-supporting, the initiatory expense having
+ been borne by the town and philanthropists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We strolled about with one of the managing staff finding the inmates very
+ sociable; one elderly gentleman invited us to sit down in his bit of
+ garden, very proud, as he might well be, of all the flowers he had
+ contrived to crowd into so small a space. We were also welcomed into some
+ of the neat interiors, these varying in size according to the scale of
+ payment. The class profiting by this associated home was evidently that of
+ the small <i>bourgeoisie</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Children there seemed to be none, one and all of the tenants being elderly
+ widows, widowers, bachelors or spinsters. There were, however, a few
+ married couples, who, if they preferred it, could cook their own meals at
+ home. For single, middle-class women here was a refuge answering to the
+ conventual boarding house of the upper classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unmarried women in France are not nearly so numerous as in England, and I
+ must say they may well envy their English and American sisters in
+ spinsterhood. An unmarried French lady belonging to genteel society cannot
+ cross the street unaccompanied till she has passed her fortieth year, nor
+ till then may she open the pages of Victor Hugo or read a newspaper. Even
+ in this &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; special provision was made for the privacy of
+ single ladies; whether they liked it or not they were expected to eat in a
+ separate dining room, and meet for social purposes in a separate salon. As
+ there is no limit to the emotional period and the age of sentiment,
+ perhaps these safeguards of propriety are not wholly superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the economy of such an arrangement is very great. Think of a
+ respectable fairly-educated young woman getting what good old John Bunyan
+ calls &ldquo;harbour and good company,&rdquo; in other words, all the other
+ necessaries of life, with society into the bargain, for £16 a year! The
+ attendance is of course somewhat rough and ready. We saw a stalwart,
+ rough-haired, rather masculine-looking female setting one of the
+ dinner-tables with a clatter that would drive the fastidious to
+ distraction. But the good soul had evidently her heart in her work, and I
+ dare aver that single-handed she got through as much as three English
+ housemaids with ourselves. Would such a scheme answer in England? I doubt
+ it. The Anglo-Saxon character is the reverse of sociable, and class
+ distinctions are so in-rooted in the English nature that it would be very
+ difficult to get ten English women together who considered themselves
+ belonging to precisely the same class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Furthermore, are there with us many widows or spinsters of the same class
+ enjoying even such small independent means as the sums above mentioned? In
+ France, teachers, tradeswomen, female clerks and others, by dint of rigid
+ economy, usually insure for themselves a small income before reaching old
+ age. Fortunately habits of thrift are increasing in England, and our women
+ workers have a larger field and earn higher wages. I had also the
+ privilege of seeing the great wool-combing factory of our countryman Mr.
+ Jonathan Holden, for upwards of forty years a citizen of Rheims. This town
+ has been for centuries one of the foremost seats of industry in France.
+ Mr. Holden&rsquo;s chimneys are kept going night and day, Sundays excepted, with
+ alternating shifts of workmen. All the hands employed are of French
+ nationality and&mdash;a fact speaking volumes&mdash;no strike has ever
+ disturbed the amicable relations of English employer and French employed.
+ The great drawback to an inspection of these workshops is the din of the
+ machinery and the odour of the skins. But there is something that takes
+ hold of the imagination in the perfection to which machinery has been
+ carried. As we gaze upon these huge engines, only occasionally touched by
+ a woman&rsquo;s hand, we are reminded of man, the pigmy guiding an elephant. We
+ seem conscious, moreover, of what almost approaches human intelligence, so
+ much of the work achieved appearing voluntary rather than automatic. The
+ skins reach Rheims direct from Australia and are here dressed, cleaned and
+ prepared for working up into cloth. If machinery is brought almost to the
+ perfection of manual dexterousness, human beings attain the precision of
+ machinery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw a neatly dressed girl at work whose sole occupation it was to tie up
+ the wool, now white as snow and soft as silk, into small parcels. The wool
+ already weighed came down by a little trough, and as swiftly and
+ methodically as wheels set in motion, the girl&rsquo;s fingers folded the paper
+ and tied the string. I should not like to guess how many of these parcels
+ she turned off in half a minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; RHEIMS&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Rheims possesses a handsome theatre, the acquaintance of which I was
+ enabled to make under exceptional circumstances. At the risk of appearing
+ slightly egotistical, I will here describe an incident which has other
+ than personal interest. My visit to Damon&rsquo;s country, the particulars of
+ which were given in a former chapter, had an especial object, viz., the
+ setting of a novel of my own having the great conventionnel for its hero.
+ The story was dramatised by two French collaborators, one of whom was at
+ that time stage manager of the Grand Theatre, Rheims. What, then, was my
+ delight to see one morning placarded throughout the town the announcement
+ of the Anglo-French play? A few days before the first representation I had
+ witnessed a rehearsal, and as I was guided through the dusky labyrinths of
+ the theatre I could realise the excessive, the appalling, combustibility
+ of such buildings. It is difficult, moreover, for those who have never
+ penetrated into such recesses&mdash;whose only acquaintance is with the
+ representation on the stage&mdash;to imagine how gloomy and sepulchral
+ &ldquo;behind the scenes&rdquo; may appear. However, by-and-by it was all cheerful
+ enough, and the rehearsal, I must say, although of a tragedy, abounded in
+ touches of humour. My friend and myself were accommodated with chairs just
+ in front of the stage near the prompter, a very friendly personage, who
+ was evidently interested in the fact of my presence. The actors and
+ actresses dropped in one by one and we exchanged a cordial handshake.
+ There was nothing theatrical about the dress or manners of these ladies,
+ whose ages ranged from extreme youth to middle age. They all looked
+ pleasant, lady-like, ordinary women, who might have quitted their
+ housekeeping or any other occupation of a domestic nature. The men, too,
+ impressed me agreeably as they greeted myself and their colleagues. Very
+ amusing was the commencement of proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, my children, put yourselves into position,&rdquo; said the stage manager,
+ making corrections or suggestions as he went on; now somebody spoke too
+ loud, and now somebody was too inarticulate, now an arm was held too
+ forward, and now a leg dragged too much. Excessively diverting, also, the
+ dummy show. In one scene of the play, a village schoolmaster is holding a
+ class of little boys and girls. To-day, a row of chairs did duty for the
+ scholars and were duly harangued, catechised, and even admonished with a
+ cane. In another scene, a peasant woman appears with her donkey, to whom
+ she confides a long tirade of troubles, the donkey for the moment being
+ like the showman&rsquo;s hero in the famous story, &ldquo;round the corner.&rdquo; A third
+ and still more amusing piece of dumb show occurred later, when an
+ ex-abbess acting as housekeeper to the village curé, let fall a basket of
+ potatoes which were supposed to roll about the stage. All went well and
+ the prompter, to whom I appealed for an opinion, assured me that I need be
+ under no uneasiness, for the piece would go off like a house on fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of that favourable prognostic an author&rsquo;s first night is always a
+ nervous affair, especially when that author is a foreigner, and her piece
+ a translation from the original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, everything went merry as a marriage bell, my kind friends filled
+ several boxes, and perhaps one of the most interesting incidents of the
+ evening was the fact that just underneath sat Danton&rsquo;s great-nephew with
+ his clerk, who had come from Arcis-sur-Aube expressly for the occasion.
+ Between the acts I went down and chatted with these two gentlemen, also
+ with a French friend who had travelled from Dijon&mdash;a six hours&rsquo;
+ railway journey&mdash;in order to witness the piece. To the best of my
+ knowledge now for the first time Danton figured on the French stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed that the theatre on this especial night was not a
+ crowded house. In the first place, three large soirées, which had been
+ postponed on account of the President&rsquo;s funeral, coincided with the
+ representation. In the second place, as a rule, the wealthier and more
+ fashionable classes do not patronise provincial theatres, especially when
+ residing within easy reach of Paris. However, the pit and gallery were
+ packed, and loud was the applause with which the appearance of Danton in a
+ blue tail coat, top boots and sash, and his vehement utterances were
+ greeted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had never crossed my mind that under such circumstances an author would
+ be called for; when, indeed, at the close of the piece, cries of &ldquo;Auteur!
+ auteur!&rdquo; were heard throughout the theatre, my friends begged me to show
+ myself. Which, proudly enough, I did, first saluting the sovereign people
+ in the gallery, then bowing less beamingly to the scantier audience in the
+ boxes, finally acknowledging the acclamations from the pit. If &ldquo;Danton à
+ Arcis&rdquo; brought its author neither fame nor fortune, it certainly repaid
+ her in another and most agreeable fashion. Two or three days later, a
+ second representation of the piece at popular prices was given, and upon
+ that occasion the house was full to overflowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grand Theatre, Rheims, is a very handsome building, and like most
+ other provincial houses maintains a company of its own, although from time
+ to time it is visited by the best Paris troupes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet another uncommon recollection of Rheims must here be recorded. In
+ September of last year, I witnessed such a spectacle as my military
+ friends assured me had never before been afforded to the marvel-loving; in
+ other words, the sight of a hundred and sixty thousand men&mdash;a host
+ perhaps more numerous than any ever commanded by Napoleon&mdash;performing
+ evolutions within range of vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By half-past five in the morning I was off from Paris with my host and
+ hostess in their motor car for the Northern railway station. The day of
+ the great review broke dull and grey, and deserted indeed looked the
+ usually gay and lively Paris streets. We reached the station at five
+ minutes to six, i.e., five minutes before the starting of our train, and
+ at once realised the neatness with which the day&rsquo;s programme had been
+ arranged, both by the railway companies and the Government. The tens of
+ thousands of sightseers had been despatched to Rheims by relays of trains
+ during the night, and the station was now kept clear for the numerous
+ specials conveying members of the Senate, the Chamber, and the Press.
+ Here, therefore, was no crowding whatever, only a quiet stream of
+ deputies, wearing their tricolour badges accompanied by their ladies, each
+ deputy having the privilege of taking two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Precisely on the stroke of six, our long and well-filled train consisting
+ of first-class carriages only steamed out of the station, taking the
+ northern route and only making a short halt at Soissons. No sooner had we
+ joined the Compiègne line than we realised the tremendous precautions
+ necessary in the case of visitors so august; double rows of soldiers were
+ placed at short intervals on either side of the railway and detachments of
+ mounted troops stationed at a distance guarded the route. The arrangements
+ for our own comfort were perfect. Our train set us down, not at Rheims,
+ but at Bétheny itself the scene of the review, a temporary station having
+ been there erected. We were, therefore within a hundred yards or so of our
+ tribune, or raised stage, and of the luncheon tents, roads having been
+ laid down to each by the Génie or engineering body. Numbered indications
+ conspicuously placed quite prevented any confusion whatever, and, indeed,
+ it was literally impossible for anyone to miss his way. The only
+ eventuality that could have spoiled everything, wet weather, fortunately
+ held off until the show was over. The review itself was a magnificent
+ spectacle, surely not without irony when we consider that this great
+ military display, one of the greatest on record, was got up in honour of
+ the first Sovereign in the world who had dared to propose a general
+ disarmament! Another line of thought was awakened by the fact of our
+ isolation. The specially invited guests of the French Government upon this
+ occasion numbered three thousand persons, and it seemed that for the Czar,
+ his train, and these, the great show was got up. The thousands of
+ outsiders, sightseers, and excursionists, brought to Rheims by cheap
+ trains from all parts of France, were nowhere; in other words, invisible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether or no such spectators got anything like a view of the evolutions I
+ do not know. I should be inclined to think that from the distance at which
+ they were kept the moving masses were mere blurs and nothing more. From
+ our own tribune, adjoining that of the Presidential party, we commanded a
+ view of the entire forces covering the vast plain, surrounded by rising
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amazing it was to see the dark immovable lines slowly break up, and as if
+ set in motion by machinery, deploy according to orders. The vast plain
+ before us was a veritable sea of men, an army, one would think, sufficient
+ for the military needs of all Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One striking feature of these superb regiments, cavalry as well as
+ infantry, was the excellence of the bands. Never before had I realised the
+ inspiriting thing that martial music might be. Another interesting point
+ was that afforded by the cyclists, several regiments having these newly
+ formed companies. Whenever a flag was borne past, whether by foot or
+ mounted soldier, the cheering was tremendous, but it was reserved for a
+ regiment of Lorrainers to receive a veritable ovation. Still so fondly
+ yearns the heart of France after her lost and mutilated provinces! On the
+ whole, and speaking as a naïve amateur, I should say that no country in
+ the world could show a grander military spectacle. Enthusiasm reigned
+ amongst all beholders, but there was no display of political bias or any
+ discordant note. Cries of &ldquo;Vive la France!&rdquo; were as frequent as those of
+ &ldquo;Vive l&rsquo;armée!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a policeman was to be seen anywhere, the deputies keeping order for
+ themselves. And not always without an effort! People would rise from their
+ seats, even stand on benches, despite the thundered out &ldquo;Remain seated!&rdquo;
+ on all sides. On the whole, and with this exception, nothing could surpass
+ the general good humour. And when the splendid cortege filed by at the
+ close, delight and satisfaction beamed on every face. M. Loubet was so
+ dignified, folks said, Madame Loubet was so well dressed, the deportment
+ of M. Waldeck Rousseau was perfect, M. Deschanel handsomer than ever, and
+ so on, every member of the Czar&rsquo;s, or rather the President&rsquo;s, entourage
+ winning approval. General André and M. Delcassé were very warmly received.
+ The slim, pale, fastidious looking young man in flat, white cap, green
+ tunic, and high boots, seated beside the portly, genial figure wearing the
+ broad Presidential ribbon, set me thinking. How at the bottom of his heart
+ does the Autocrat of All The Russias view these representatives of the
+ great French Republic! How does he really feel towards France, the first
+ nation of the western world to set the example of officially recognised
+ self-government, the initiator of a system as opposed to Russian despotism
+ as is white to black? Whatever may be the secret of this strange
+ Franco-Russian alliance, it is apparently in the interest of peace, and,
+ as such, should be warmly welcomed by all advocates of progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luncheon was superabundant, consisting of wines, cold meat, and bread
+ in plenty. The task of finding refreshment for three thousand people had
+ been satisfactorily solved. The only thing wanting was water. It seems
+ that upon such an occasion no one was expected to drink anything short of
+ Bordeaux, Burgundy, or pale ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the special trains were crowded for the return journey, made by way of
+ Meaux, but everyone made way for everyone, and we reached Paris at eight
+ o&rsquo;clock, almost as fresh and quite as good-humoured as we had quitted it
+ at dawn. If this great review was interesting from one point more than
+ another, it was from the manner in which it displayed the wonderful
+ organising faculty of the French mind. The most trifling details no more
+ than the largest combinations can disconcert this pre-eminently national
+ aptitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first of these places mentioned is a Champenois village twelve miles
+ from a railway station. From the windows of my friends&rsquo; château I look
+ upon a magnificent deer park, where during the oft-time torrid heat of
+ summer delicious shade is to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far away vast forests bound the horizon, to the north a hot open road
+ leading to Brienne-le-Château, where Napoleon studied as a military cadet;
+ eastward, lies varied scenery between Soulaines and Bar-sur-Aube, there
+ woodland ending and the vine country beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one especial visit during September, not even these acres of
+ closely-serried forest could induce more than a suggestion of shadow and
+ coolness. Although screened from view the sun was there. Throughout a vast
+ region&mdash;half a province of woodland&mdash;folks breathed the hot air
+ of the Soudan. The tropic temperature admitted of no exercise during the
+ day, but after four o&rsquo;clock tea we broke up into parties&mdash;drove,
+ rode, strolled, called upon homelier neighbours, visited quaint old
+ churches hidden in the trees or forest nooks, the solitude only broken by
+ pattering of deer and rabbits, or nut-cracking squirrel aloft. Here and
+ there we would come upon huts of charcoal-burner and wood-cutter,
+ gamekeepers and foresters, too, had their scattered lodges; such signs of
+ human habitation being few and far between.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are here in the remnant of the great Celtic forest of Der. The
+ straggling village of Soulaines is one long street, a little stream
+ running behind the picturesque, timbered houses, many of these have outer
+ wooden staircases leading to grange or storehouse. Church and presbytery,
+ convent and Mairie were conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the opposite direction, another church rose above the horizon, the
+ centre of what in France is called not a village but a hamlet. Bare as a
+ barn seen from far and near showed this little church, and we often walked
+ thither for the sake of its picturesque surroundings. The portal of the
+ quaint old building is a mass of ancient sculpture, close round it being
+ grouped a few mud-built, timbered, one-storeyed dwellings all of a
+ pattern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in France are to be found day labourers, only the very poorest,
+ however, being without a cottage, plot of ground, a cow and of poultry
+ their own. Many of their interiors are far neater and cleaner than those
+ of the farm-houses, their occupants not being so tied to the soil from
+ morning to night, not, in fact, incited to Herculean labours by the spur
+ of larger possession. We visited one of the poorest villages hereabouts,
+ of not quite a hundred souls, but of course, provided with church, school
+ and Mairie. Many a group of potato diggers we saw in the exquisite
+ twilight, suggestive of Millet, many a landscape recalling other masters.
+ This handful of woodlanders&mdash;for the village is surrounded by forests&mdash;is
+ perhaps as poor as any rural population to be found throughout France. Yet
+ here surprises await us. Some of the better off hire a little land, keep
+ cows, rear poultry, most likely in time to become owners of a plot. They
+ are paid for harvest work in kind, several we talked to having earned
+ enough corn for the winter&rsquo;s consumption&mdash;as they put it&mdash;our
+ winter&rsquo;s bread. They are a fine, sunburnt, well-formed race and seem
+ cheerful enough. In one of the poorest houses, a huge pipkin on the fire
+ emitted savoury steam, and rows of small cheeses garnished the shelves.
+ Good oak bedsteads, linen presses and old-fashioned clocks were general.
+ Every mantel-piece had its framed photograph and ornamental crockery. New
+ milk was always freely offered us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within the precincts of this hamlet we find ourselves in a bluish-green
+ land of mingled wood and water; above the reedy marsh, haunt of wild fowl,
+ willows grew thick; here and there the water flowed freely, its surface
+ broken by the plash of carp and trout. At this season all hands hereabouts
+ were busy with threshing out the newly garnered corn and getting in
+ potatoes. The crops are very varied, wheat, barley, lucerne, beetroot,
+ buckwheat, colza, potatoes; we see a little of everything. Artificial
+ manures are not much used, nor agricultural machinery to a great extent,
+ except by large farmers, but the land is clean and in a high state of
+ cultivation. Peasant property is the rule; labouring for hire, the
+ condition of non-possession, very rare. And whether the times are good or
+ evil, land dirt cheap or dear, the year&rsquo;s savings go to the purchase of a
+ field or two and, as a necessary consequence, to the consolidation of the
+ Republic and the maintenance of Parliamentary institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will now say something of our neighbours. One of these was the parish
+ priest, who had the care of between six and seven hundred souls. The fact
+ may be new to some readers that a village curé, even in these days,
+ receives on an average little more than Goldsmith&rsquo;s country parson,
+ &ldquo;counted rich on forty pounds a year.&rdquo; This curé&rsquo;s stipend, including
+ perquisites amounted to just sixty pounds yearly, in addition to which he
+ had a good house, large garden and paddock. But compare such a position
+ with that of one of our own rectors and vicars!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Protestant clergy in France are better paid than those belonging to
+ the orthodox faith. Being heads of families, they are supposed, and
+ justly, to need more. Let it not be imagined, however, that the priest
+ receives less under the Republic than under the Empire. But the cost of
+ living has increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there are black sheep in the Romish fold as elsewhere; perhaps
+ even the simplicity, learning and devotion to duty of the individual I
+ here write of, are rare. Yet one cannot help feeling how much more money
+ the Government would have at command with which to remunerate good workers
+ in pacific fields if disarmament were practicable. This excellent priest,
+ like other men of education and taste, would have relished a little travel
+ as much as do our own vicars and curates their annual outing to Norway or
+ Switzerland. What remains for recreation and charity after defraying
+ household expenses and cost of a housekeeper out of sixty pounds a year?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next, let me say a word about the <i>juge de paix</i> in France, as I
+ presume most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than
+ that of a priest. The average stipend of a justice of the peace is about a
+ hundred pounds a year, with lodging, but although his duties often take
+ him far afield he is not provided with a vehicle, and must either cycle or
+ defray the cost of carriage hire. I know many of these rural magistrates,
+ and have ever found them men of education and intelligence. I, now, for
+ the first time, found one well read in English literature, not only able
+ to discuss Shakespeare and Walter Scott, but the latest English novel
+ appearing in translation as a feuilleton. It is well that these small
+ officials should have such resources. Tied down as they are to remote
+ country spots, their existence is often monotonous enough, especially
+ during the winter months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems to be a canon of French faith that you cannot have too much of a
+ good thing, anyhow in the matter of wedding festivities. Parisian society
+ is beginning to adopt English saving of time and money, fashionable
+ marriages there now being followed by a brief lunch and reception.
+ Country-folks stick to tradition, preferring to make the most of an event
+ which as a rule happens only once during a lifetime. Gratifying as was the
+ experience to an English guest, especially that guest being a devoted
+ admirer of France, I must honestly confess that my share in such a
+ celebration constituted probably the hardest day&rsquo;s work I ever performed.
+ Here I will explain that the bride&rsquo;s father was head forester of my host
+ and hostess, the great folks of the place, and adored by their humbler
+ neighbours. Château and cottage were thus closely, nay affectionately,
+ interested in the important event I am about to describe, and this aspect
+ of it is fully as noteworthy as the truly Gallic character of the long
+ drawn out fête itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By nine a.m. horses and carriages of the château, adorned with wedding
+ favours, were flying madly about in all directions conveying the wedding
+ party to and from the Mairie for the civil ceremony. An hour later we were
+ ourselves off to the village church, the house party including three
+ English guests. The enormously long religious ceremony over, a procession
+ was formed headed by musicians, bride and bridegroom leading the way,
+ fifty and odd couples following and the round of the village was made. At
+ the door of the festive house we formed a circle, the newly-wedded pair
+ embracing everyone and receiving congratulations; this is a somewhat
+ lachrymose ceremony. The marriage was in every way satisfactory, but the
+ nice-looking young bride, a general favourite, was quitting for ever her
+ childhood&rsquo;s home. After some little delay we all took our places in two
+ banqueting rooms, the tables being arranged horse-shoe wise. Facing bride
+ and bridegroom sat my host, the second room being presided over by the
+ bride&rsquo;s father, of whom I shall have something to say later. Here I give
+ the bill of fare, merely adding that the festive board was neatly, even
+ elegantly, spread, and that every dish was excellent:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Hors d&rsquo;oeuvre Salade de saison
+ Radis, beurre frais, Langue fumée Fruits
+ Bouchées à la Reine Brioche. Nougat
+ Daim, sauce chassuer Desserts varies
+ Galantine truffée Vins
+ Salmis de canards Pineau, Bordeaux, Champagne
+ Choux-fleurs Café, Liqueurs.
+ Dinde truffée.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Looking down the lines of well-dressed people, all with the exception of
+ ourselves belonging to the same rank as the bride, I could but be struck
+ with the good looks, gentle bearing, and general appearance of everyone.
+ As to the head forester, he was one of Nature&rsquo;s gentlemen, and might
+ easily have passed for a general or senator. At the table sat several
+ young girls of the village, each having a cavalier, all these dressed very
+ neatly and comporting themselves like well-bred young ladies without
+ presumption or awkwardness. During the inevitable pauses between dish and
+ dish, one after another of these pretty girls stood up and gratified the
+ company with a song, the performance costing perhaps an effort, but being
+ got through simply and naturally. In the midst of the banquet, which
+ lasted over three hours, two professionals came to sing and recite. From
+ the breakfast table, after toasts,&mdash;the afternoon being now well
+ advanced&mdash;we again formed a procession to the Mairie, in front of
+ which <i>al fresco</i> dancing commenced. Add that this out-of-door ball
+ lasted till a second dinner, the dinner being followed by a second ball
+ lasting far into the small hours. Nor did the celebration end here. The
+ following day was equally devoted to visits, feasts, toasts, and dancing.
+ What a national heritage is this capacity for fellowship, gaiety, and
+ harmless mirth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bar-sur-Aube lies twelve miles off and a beautiful drive it is thither
+ from Soulaines. We gradually leave forest, pasture and arable land,
+ finding ourselves amid vineyards. At the little village of
+ Ville-sur-Terre, we one day halted at a farm-house for a chat, the
+ housewife most kindly presenting me with two highly decorative plates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we approach Bar-sur-Aube we come upon a wide and beautiful prospect,
+ wooded hills dominating the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This little town is very prettily situated, and like every other in France
+ possesses some old churches. Perhaps its most famous child is Bombonnel,
+ the great panther-slayer, born close by, who died at Dijon and whose
+ souvenirs bequeathed to me as a legacy I have given elsewhere. The son of
+ a working glazier, he made a little fortune as hawker of stockings in the
+ streets of New Orleans, returned to France, cleared the Algerian Tell of
+ panthers, for a time enjoyed ease with dignity in Burgundy; on the
+ outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870, as leader of a thousand <i>francs-tireurs</i>,
+ gave the Germans more trouble than any commander of an army corps, twice
+ had a price of £1,000 set upon his head, was glorified by Victor Hugo,
+ received the decoration of the Legion of Honour, and as a reward for his
+ patriotic services several hundred acres of land in Algeria. A gigantic
+ statue of Sant Hubert, the patron of hunters, now commemorates the great
+ little man, for he was short of statue, in the cemetery of Dijon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bar-sur-Aube is connected with another notoriety, the infamous Madame de
+ la Motte, the arch-adventuress, who, a descendant herself of Valois kings,
+ proved the undoing of Marie Antoinette. As was truly said by a great
+ contemporary:&mdash;&ldquo;The affair of the Diamond Necklace,&rdquo; wrote Mirabeau,
+ &ldquo;has been the forerunner of the Revolution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Jeanne de Valois, rescued from the gutter by a benovolent lady of
+ title and a charitable priest, presents a psychological study rare even in
+ the annals of crime. Never, perhaps, were daring, unscrupulousness, and
+ the faculty of combination linked with so complete a disregard to
+ consequences. The moving spring of her actions, often so complicated and
+ foolhardy, was love of money and display. It seemed as if in her person,
+ was accumulated the lavishness of French Royal mistresses from Diane de
+ Poitiers down to Madame Dubarry. There was a good deal of the Becky Sharp
+ about her too, although there is nothing in her history to show that, like
+ Thackeray&rsquo;s heroine, &ldquo;she had no objection to pay people if she had the
+ money.&rdquo; If, indeed, anything in the shape of ethics guided the most
+ astoundingly ingenious swindler we know of, it was some such principle as
+ this: she ought to have been at Versailles, there being received as a
+ recognised Princess of the Royal House; since, through no fault whatever
+ of her own, she was not, she had a perfect right to avenge herself upon
+ royalty and society in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How she wormed herself into the confidence of the Cardinal de Rohan, a man
+ of the world and of education, would seem wholly unaccountable but for one
+ fact. The Prince Primate had faith in Cagliostro and his nostrums, and
+ when an individual has recourse to astrologers and fortune-tellers, we are
+ quite in a position to gauge his mental condition. Like Mdlle. Couesdon of
+ contemporary fame, Cagliostro held intercourse with the angel Gabriel, but
+ his occult powers and privileges far exceeded those of the Parisian
+ lady-seer. He was actually in the habit of dining with Henri IV., and two
+ days before the Cardinal&rsquo;s arrest made his client believe that he had just
+ accepted such an invitation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been Rohan&rsquo;s ambition to obtain the favour of the Queen and a
+ foremost position at court, hence the readiness with which he fell into
+ the trap. For &ldquo;the Valois orphan,&rdquo; now Comtesse de la Motte, not only
+ possessed great personal attractions, but an extraordinary gift of
+ persuasiveness. Without much apparent trouble she made the Cardinal
+ believe that she was in the Queen&rsquo;s favour, and indeed in her confidence.
+ Having got so far the rest was easy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the acquisition of the already celebrated Diamond Necklace was first
+ thought of, how, by the aid of willing tools, she matured and carried out
+ her deep-laid and diabolical scheme, reads like an adventure from the
+ &ldquo;Arabian Nights.&rdquo; The personification of the Queen by a little dressmaker
+ who happened to resemble her, the forgery of the Royal signature, the
+ final attainment of the diamonds, all seemed so easy to this consummate
+ trickster that it is small wonder she became intoxicated with success and
+ blind to consequences. No sooner was the necklace in her possession than,
+ of course, as fast as possible it was turned, not into money, but into
+ money&rsquo;s worth. Houses and lands, equipages and furniture, costly apparel,
+ and delicacies for the table were purchased, not with louis d&rsquo;or, but with
+ diamonds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We read of her triumphant entry into the little town of Bar-sur-Aube,
+ cradle of the Saint Rémy-Valois family, in a berline with white trappings
+ and the Valois armorials, before and behind the carriage, which was drawn
+ by &ldquo;four English horses with short tails,&rdquo; rode lacqueys, whilst on the
+ footboard ready to open the door stood a negro, &ldquo;covered, from head to
+ foot with silver.&rdquo; Still more dazzling was the dress of Madame la
+ Comtesse, richest brocade trimmed with rubies and emeralds. As to the
+ Count, not content with having rings on every finger he wore four gold
+ watch chains! Besides holding open house when at home, the pair had a
+ table always spread with dainties for those who chose to partake in their
+ hosts&rsquo; absence. Among the toys paid for in diamonds was an automatic bird
+ that warbled and flapped its wings. This was intended for the amusement of
+ visitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carnival proved of short duration. It was on the 1st of February,
+ 1783, that the diamond necklace was handed over to Madame de la Motte,
+ Rohan receiving in return the forged signature of &ldquo;Marie-Antoinette de
+ France.&rdquo; On August of the same year, in the midst of a banquet given at
+ Bar-sur-Aube, a visitor arrived with startling news. &ldquo;The Prince Cardinal
+ de Rohan, Grand Almoner of France, was on the Festival of Assumption,
+ arrested in pontifical robes, charged with having purchased a diamond
+ necklace in the name of the Queen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charm of these little French towns and rustic spots lies in their
+ remoteness, the feeling they give us of being so entirely aloof from
+ familiar surroundings. In many a small Breton or Norman town we hear
+ little else but English speech, and in the one general shop of tiny
+ villages see <i>The New York Herald</i> on sale. But from the time of
+ leaving Nemours to that of reaching the farthest point mentioned in these
+ sketches we encounter no English or American tourists. This essentially
+ foreign atmosphere is not less agreeable than conducive to instruction. We
+ are thus thrown into direct contact with the country people and are
+ enabled to realise French modes of life and thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Within the last twenty-five years so many new lines of railway have been
+ opened in France that there is no longer any inducement&mdash;I am
+ inclined to say excuse&mdash;for keeping to the main road. Yet, strangely
+ enough, English tourists mostly ignore such opportunities. For one
+ fellow-countryman we meet on the route described here, hundreds are
+ encountered on the time-honoured roads running straight from Paris to
+ Switzerland. Quit Dijon by any other way and the English-speaking world is
+ lost sight of, perhaps more completely than anywhere else on the civilised
+ globe. Again and again it has happened to myself to be regarded in rural
+ France as a kind of curiosity, the first subject of Queen Victoria ever
+ met with; again and again I have spent days, nay weeks, on French soil,
+ the sole reminder of my native land being the daily paper posted in
+ London. It is now many years since I first visited St. Jean de Losne, in
+ company of a French acquaintance, a notary, both of us being bound to a
+ country-house on the Saône. At that time the railway did not connect it
+ with Dijon, and in brilliant September weather we jogged along by
+ diligence, a pleasant five hours&rsquo; journey enough. My companion, a native
+ of the Côte d&rsquo;Or, seemed to know everyone we passed on the way, whenever
+ we stopped to change horses getting out for a gossip with this friend and
+ that he had taken the precaution to provide himself with a huge loaf of
+ bread, from which he hacked off morsels for us both from time to time. As
+ we had started at seven o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and got no déjeûner till
+ past noon, the doles were acceptable. The fellow-traveller of that first
+ journey&mdash;alas! With how many friends of the wine country!&mdash;has
+ long since gone to his rest. The second time I set forth alone, taking my
+ seat in the slow&mdash;the very slow&mdash;train running alongside the
+ Canal de Bourgogne. On the central platforms of the Dijon railway station,
+ crowds of English and American tourists were hurrying to their trains,
+ bound respectively for Paris and Geneva. No sooner was I fairly off, my
+ fellow travellers being two or three country-folks, than the
+ conventionalities of travel had vanished. Surroundings as well as scenery
+ became entirely French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Burgundian character is very affable, and although people may wonder
+ what can be your errand in remote regions, they never show their curiosity
+ after disagreeable fashion. They are delighted to discover that interest
+ in France&mdash;artistic, economic, or industrial&mdash;has led you
+ thither, and will afford any assistance or information in their power.
+ They seem to regard the wayfaring Britisher as whimsical, that is all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A train that crawls has this advantage, we can see everything by the way,
+ villages, crops, and methods of cultivation. The landscape soon changes.
+ The familiar characteristics of the wine country disappear. Instead of
+ vine-clad hills, nurseries of young plants grafted on American stocks, and
+ vineyard after vineyard in rich maturity, we now see hop gardens, colza
+ fields, and wide pastures. Here and there we obtain a glimpse of some
+ walled-in farmhouse, recalling the granges of our own Isle of Wight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alongside the railway runs the canal, that important waterway connecting
+ the Seine with the Saône; but the Saône itself, Mr. Hamerton&rsquo;s favourite
+ river, is not seen till we reach our destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little town of St. Jean de Losne, although unknown to English readers,
+ is one of the most historic of France. No other, indeed, boasts of more
+ honourable renown. As Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc had done just two centuries before, St.
+ Jean de Losne saved the country in 1636. When the Imperial forces under
+ Galas attempted the occupation of Burgundy, the dauntless townsfolk long
+ held the enemy at bay and compelled final retreat. After generations
+ profited by this heroism. Until the great year of 1789, the town, by royal
+ edict, enjoyed complete immunity from taxation. On the outbreak of the
+ Revolution, with true patriotic spirit, the citizens surrendered those
+ privileges, of their own free will sharing the public burdens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first sight that meets the eye on entering St. Jean de Losne is the
+ monument erected in commemoration of the siege. &ldquo;Better late than never,&rdquo;
+ is a proverb applicable to public as well as private affairs of
+ conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little farther, and we reach the church of St. Jean. It contains a
+ magnificent pulpit, carved from a single block of rich red marble, the
+ niches ornamented with charming statuettes of the apostles. Close by is
+ the Hôtel de Ville, in which are some interesting historic relics. As I
+ passed through the courtyard, I saw an odd sight. One might have fancied
+ that a second Imperial army threatened a siege, and that the townsfolk
+ were laying in stores. The pavement was piled with bread and meat, whilst
+ butchers and bakers were busily engaged in dividing these into portions,
+ authorities, municipal, military and police, looking on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I learned that these rations were for the regiments quartered in the town
+ during the autumn manoeuvres. Every day such distributions take place; in
+ country places the troops have recourse to the peasants, very often being
+ treated as guests. A young friend, serving his three years, told me that
+ nowhere had he found country folk more hospitable than in the Côte d&rsquo;Or.
+ No sooner did the soldiers make their appearance in a village, than forth
+ came the inhabitants to welcome them, officers being carried off to
+ châteaux, men by twos and threes to the home of curé or small owner. &ldquo;Not
+ a peasant,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but would bring up a bottle of good wine from his
+ cellar, and often after dinner we would get up a dance out of doors. On
+ the saddle sometimes from two in the morning till twelve at noon, the kind
+ reception and the jollity of the evening made up for the hardship and
+ fatigue. We have just had several days of bad weather, and had to sleep on
+ straw in barns and outhouses, wherever indeed shelter was to be had. Not
+ one of us ever lost heart or temper; we remained gay as larks all the
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour&rsquo;s railway journey from St. Jean de Losne takes the traveller to
+ Lons-le-Saulnier, beautifully situated at the foot of the Jura range on
+ the threshold of wild and romantic scenery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A decade had not robbed this little town of its old-world look familiar to
+ me, but meantime a new Lons-le-Saulnier had sprung up. Since my first
+ visit a handsome bathing establishment has been built, with casino,
+ concert-room, and all the other essentials of an inland watering-place.
+ The waters are especially recommended for skin affections, gout, and
+ rheumatism. Formerly the mineral springs of Lons, as the townsfolk lazily
+ call the place, were chiefly frequented by residents and near neighbours.
+ Improved accommodation, increased accessibility, cheapened travel and
+ additional attractions, have changed matters. The season opening in May,
+ and lasting till the end of October, is now patronised by hundreds of
+ visitors from all parts of eastern France. These health resorts are much
+ more sociable than our own. Folks drop alike social, political, and
+ religious differences for the time being, and cultivate the art of being
+ agreeable as only French people can. Excursions, picnics, and pleasure
+ parties are arranged; in the evening the young folks dance whilst their
+ elders play a rubber of whist, chat, look on, or make marriages. Many a
+ wedding is arranged during the <i>Saison des Bains</i>, nor can such
+ unions be called <i>mariages de convenance</i>, as in holiday-time
+ intercourse is comparatively unrestricted. Grown-up or growing-up sons and
+ daughters then meet as those on English or American soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lons-le-Saulnier possesses little of interest except its Museum, rich in
+ modern sculpture, and its quaint arcades, recalling the period of Spanish
+ rule in Franche Comté. The excursions lying within easy reach are numerous
+ and delightful. Foremost of these is a visit to the marvellous rock-shut
+ valley of Baume-les-Messieurs, so called to distinguish it from
+ Baume-les-Dames near Besançon. The descent is made on foot, and at first
+ sight appears not only perilous but impracticable, the zigzag path being
+ cut in almost perpendicular shelves of rock. This mountain staircase, or
+ the &ldquo;Échelle des Baumes,&rdquo; is not to be recommended to those afflicted with
+ giddiness. Little sunshine reaches the heart of the gorge, yet below the
+ turf is brilliant, a veritable islet of green threaded by a tiny river.
+ The natural walls shutting us in have a majestic aspect, but playful and
+ musical is the Seille as it ripples at our feet. Travellers of an
+ adventuresome turn can explore the stalactite caverns and other marvels
+ around; not the least of these is a tiny lake, the depth of which has
+ never been sounded. For half-a-mile the valley winds towards the
+ straggling village of Baume, and there the marvels abruptly end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing finer in the way of scenery is to be found throughout eastern
+ France. In the ancient Abbey Church are two masterpieces, a retable in
+ carved wood and a tomb ornamented with exquisite statuettes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; NANCY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a pleasant six hours&rsquo; journey from Dijon via Chalindrey to Nancy. We
+ pass the little village of Gemeaux, in which amongst French friends I have
+ spent so many happy days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the railway we catch sight of the monticule crowned by an obelisk;
+ surmounting the vine-clad slopes, we also obtain a glimpse of its &ldquo;Ormes
+ de Sully,&rdquo; or group of magnificent elms, one of many in France supposed to
+ have been planted by the great Sully. Since my first acquaintance with
+ this neighbourhood, more than twenty years ago, the aspect of the country
+ hereabouts has in no small degree changed. Hop gardens in many spots have
+ replaced vineyards, owing to the devastation of the phylloxera. It was in
+ the last years of the third Empire that the inhabitants of Roquemaure on
+ the Rhône found their vines mysteriously withering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later the left bank was attacked, and about the same time the
+ famous brandy producing region of Cognac in the Charente showed similar
+ symptoms. The cause of the mischief, the terrible Phylloxera devastatrix,
+ was brought to light in 1868. This tiny insect is hardly visible to the
+ naked eye, yet so formed by Nature as to be a wholesale engine of
+ destruction, its phenomenal productiveness being no less fatal than its
+ equally phenomenal powers of locomotion. One of these tiny parasites alone
+ propagates at the rate of millions of eggs in a season, a thousand alone
+ sufficing to destroy two acres and a half of vineyard. As formidable as
+ this terrible fertility is the speed of the insect&rsquo;s wings or rather sails
+ according extraordinary ease of movement. A gust of wind, a mere breath of
+ air, and like a grain of dust or a tuft of thistledown, this germ of
+ destruction is borne whither chance directs, to the certain ruin of any
+ vineyard on which it lights. The havoc spread with terrible rapidity. From
+ every vine-growing region of France arose cries of consternation. Within
+ the space of a few years hundreds of thousands of acres were hopelessly
+ blighted. In 1878 the invader was first noticed at Meursault in Burgundy;
+ a few days later it appeared in the Botanical Gardens of Dijon. The cost
+ of replanting vineyards with American stocks is so heavy, viz.: twenty
+ pounds per hectare, that even many rich vintagers have preferred to
+ cultivate other crops. Some owners have sold their lands outright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On quitting Is-sur-Tille we enter the so-called Plat de Langres, or richly
+ cultivated plains stretching between that town and Toul, in the Department
+ of the Meurthe and Moselle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the almost sudden change of landscape&mdash;woods, winding rivers,
+ and hayfields in which peasants are getting in their autumn crop,
+ literally mauve-tinted from the profusion of autumn crocuses&mdash;we
+ encounter sharp contrasts, the events of 1870-1 changing the French
+ frontier, necessitating the transformation we now behold&mdash;once quiet,
+ old-world towns now wearing the aspect of a vast camp, everywhere to be
+ seen military defences on a wholly inconceivable scale. It is comforting
+ to hear from the lips of those who should know, that at the present time
+ war is impossible, the engines of warfare being so tremendous that the
+ result of a conflict would be simply annihilation on both sides. After ten
+ years&rsquo; absence, and in spite of radical changes, the elegant, exquisitely
+ kept town of Nancy appears little altered to me. The ancient capital of
+ Lorraine is now one of the largest garrisons on the eastern frontier, but
+ the military aspect is not too obtrusive. Except for the perpetual roll of
+ the heavy artillery waggons and perpetual sight of the red pantalon, we
+ are apt to forget the present position of Nancy from a strategic point of
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other changes are pleasanter to dwell on. The Facultés, or schools of
+ medicine, science, and law, removed hither from Strasburg after the
+ annexation, have immensely increased the intellectual status of Nancy,
+ whilst from the commercial and industrial side the advance has been no
+ less. Its population has doubled since the events of 1870-1, and is
+ constantly increasing. Why so few English travellers visit this dainty and
+ attractive little capital is not easy to explain. More interesting even
+ than the artistic and historic collections of Nancy is the celebrated
+ School of Forestry. Formerly a few young Englishmen were out-students of
+ this school, but since the study had been made accessible at home the
+ foreign element at the time of my visit, consisted of a few Roumanians,
+ sent by their Government. The École Forestière, courteously shown to
+ visitors, was founded sixty years ago and is conducted on almost a
+ military system. Only twenty-four students are received annually, and
+ these must have passed severe examinations either at the École Agronomique
+ of Paris, or at the École Polytechnique. The staff consists of a director
+ and six professors, all paid by the State. Two or three years form the
+ curriculum and successful students are sure of obtaining good Government
+ appointments. Forestry being a most important service, every branch of
+ natural science connected with the preservation of forests, and
+ afforesting is taught, the school collections forming a most interesting
+ and wholly unique museum. Here we see, exquisitely arranged as books on
+ library shelves, specimens of wood of all countries, whilst elsewhere
+ sections from the tiniest to the gigantic stems of America. Very
+ instructive, too, are the models of those regions in France already
+ afforested, and of those undergoing the process; we also see the system by
+ means of which the soil is so consolidated as to render plantation
+ possible, namely, the arresting of mountain torrents by dams and barrages.
+ In the Dauphiné, and French Alps generally, many denuded tracks are in
+ course of transformation, the expense being partly borne by the State and
+ partly by the communes. It is impossible to over-estimate the importance
+ of such works, alike from a climatic, economic, and hygienic point of
+ view. The extensive eucalyptus plantations in Algeria, teach us the value
+ of afforesting, vast tracks having been thereby rendered healthful and
+ cultivable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strikingly beautiful city, sad of aspect withal, is this ancient capital
+ of Lorraine, ever wearing half mourning, as it seems, for the loss of its
+ sister Alsace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unforgettable is the glimpse of the Place Stanislas, with its bronze
+ gates, fountains, and statue, worthy of a great capital; of the beautiful
+ figure of Duke Antonio of Lorraine on horseback, under an archway of
+ flamboyant Gothic; of the Ducal Palace and its airy colonnade; lastly, of
+ the picturesque old city gate, the Porte de la Crafie, one of the most
+ striking monuments of the kind in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things may be glanced at in an hour, but in order to enjoy Nancy
+ thoroughly, a day or two should be devoted to it, and creature comforts
+ are to be had in the hotels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Ducal Palace are shown the rich tapestries found in the tent of
+ Charles le Téméraire after his defeat before Nancy, and other relics of
+ that Haroun-al-Raschid of his epoch, who bivouacked off gold and silver
+ plate, and wore on the battle-field diamonds worth half a million. The
+ cenotaphs of the Dukes of Lorraine are in a little church outside the town&mdash;the
+ <i>chapelle ronde</i>, as the splendid little mausoleum is designated, its
+ imposing monuments of black marble and richly-decorated octagonal dome,
+ making up a solemn and beautiful whole. Graceful and beautiful also are
+ the monuments in the church itself, and those of another church, des
+ Cordeliers, close to the Ducal Palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy is especially rich in monumental sculpture, but it is in the
+ cathedral that we are enchanted by the marble statues of the four doctors
+ of the church&mdash;St. Augustine, St. Grégoire, St. Léon, and St. Jerome.
+ These are the work of Nicholas Drouin, a native of the town, and formerly
+ ornamented a tomb in the church of the Cordeliers just mentioned. The
+ physiognomy, expression, and pose of St. Augustine are well worthy of a
+ sculptor&rsquo;s closest study, but it is rather as a whole than in detail that
+ this exquisite statue delights the ordinary observer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All four sculptures are noble works of art; the beautiful, dignified
+ figure of St. Augustine somehow takes strongest hold of the imagination.
+ We would fain return to it again and again, as indeed we would fain return
+ to all else we have seen in the fascinating city of Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Nancy, by way of Epinal, we may easily reach the heart of the Vosges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. &mdash; IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At the railway station of Nancy, I was met by a French family party, my
+ hosts to be in a château on the other side of the French frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had jogged on pleasantly enough for about half an hour, when the
+ gentlemen of the party, with (to me) perplexing smiles, briskly folded
+ their newspapers and consigned them, not to their pockets or rugs, but to
+ their ladies, by whom the journals were secreted in underskirts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are approaching the frontier,&rdquo; said Madame to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I afterwards learned that only one or two French newspapers are allowed to
+ circulate in the annexed provinces, the <i>Temps</i> and others, the names
+ of which I forget; for the first and second offence of smuggling
+ prohibited newspapers, the offender is subjected to a reprimand, the third
+ offence is punished by a fine, the fourth involves imprisonment. Now, as
+ all of us know who have lived in France, the <i>Figaro</i> is a veritable
+ necessity to the better-off classes in France, the <i>Times</i> to John
+ Bull not more so. Similarly, to the peasant and the artisan, the <i>Petit
+ Journal</i> takes the place of the half-penny newspaper in England. This
+ deprivation is cruelly felt, and is part of the system introduced by
+ William II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Custom-house dues are at all times vexatious, but on the French-Prussian
+ frontier they are so arranged as to provoke patriotic feeling. It may seem
+ a foolish fancy for French folks, German subjects of the Kaiser, to prefer
+ French soap and stationery, yet what more natural than the purchase of
+ such things when within easy reach? Thus, on alighting at the frontier,
+ not only were trunks and baskets turned out, we were all eyed from head to
+ foot suspiciously. My hosts&rsquo; newspapers were not unearthed, certainly;
+ perhaps their rank and position counted for something. But one country
+ girl had to pay duty on a shilling box of writing paper, another was
+ mulcted to half the value of a bottle of scent, and so on. There was
+ something really pathetic in the forced display of these trifles, the
+ purchasers being working people and peasants. All French goods and
+ productions are exorbitantly taxed. Thus a lady must pay three or four
+ shillings duty on a bonnet perhaps costing twenty in France. On a cask of
+ wine, the duty often exceeds the price of its contents, and, according to
+ an inexorable law of human nature, the more inaccessible are these
+ patriotic luxuries, so the more persistently will they be coveted and
+ indulged in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Custom House officials on the Prussian side have no easy time of it,
+ ladies especially giving them no little trouble. The duty on a new dress
+ sent or brought from France across the frontier is ten francs; and we were
+ told an amusing story of a French lady, who thought to neatly circumvent
+ the douane. She was going from Nancy to Strasburg to a wedding, and in the
+ ladies&rsquo; waiting-room on the French side changed her dress, putting on the
+ new, a rich costume bought for the ceremony. The officials got wind of the
+ matter. The dress was seized and finally redeemed after damages of a
+ thousand francs!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Persons in indifferent circumstances, however patriotic they may be, can
+ subsist upon German beer, soap, and writing paper. The blood tax, upon
+ which I shall say something further on, is a wholly different matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short drive brought us to a noble château, inside a beautifully wooded
+ park, the iron gateway showing armorial bearings. Indoors there was
+ nothing to remind me that I had exchanged Republican France for autocratic
+ Prussia. Guests, servants, speech, usages, books, were French, or, in the
+ case of the three latter, English. Every member of the family spoke
+ English, afternoon tea was served as at home, and the latest Tauchnitz
+ volumes lay on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Difficult indeed it seemed to realise that I had crossed the frontier,
+ that though within easy reach, almost in sight of it, the miss, alas! Was
+ as good as a mile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alsace-Lorraine, I may here mention, is a verbal annexation dating from
+ 1871. Whilst Alsace was German until its conquest by Louis XIV., Lorraine,
+ the country of Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc, had been in part French and French-speaking
+ for centuries. Alsace under French <i>régime</i> retained alike
+ Protestantism and Teutonic speech. We can easily understand that the
+ changes of 1871 should come much harder to the Catholic Lorrainers than to
+ their Protestant Alsatian neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bitterness of feeling does not seem to me to diminish with time. On the
+ occasion of my third visit to Germanised France, I found things much the
+ same, the clinging to France ineradicable as ever, nothing like the
+ faintest sign of reconciliation with Imperial rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might suppose that, after a generation, some slight approach to
+ intercourse would exist among the French and Prussian populations. By the
+ upper classes the Germans, no matter what their rank or position, remain
+ tabooed as were Jews in the Ghetto of former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At luncheon next day, my host smilingly informed me that he had filled up
+ the paper left by the commissary of police, concerning their newly arrived
+ English visitor. We are here, it must be remembered, in a perpetual state
+ of siege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I put down Canterbury as your birthplace&mdash;&rdquo; he began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Heavens!&rdquo; exclaimed I, &ldquo;I was born near Ipswich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he said, smiling, &ldquo;I just put down the first name that occurred to
+ me, and filled in particulars as to age, etc.,&rdquo; here he bowed, &ldquo;after a
+ fashion which I felt would be satisfactory to yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This kind of domiciliary visit may appear a joking matter, but to live
+ under a state of siege is no subject for pleasantry, as I shall show
+ further on. Here is another instance of the comic side of annexation, if
+ the adjective could be applied to such a subject. In the salon I noticed a
+ sofa cushion, covered, as I thought to my astonishment, with the Prussian
+ flag. But my hostess smilingly informed me that, as the Tricolour was
+ forbidden in Germanised Lorraine, by way of having the next best thing to
+ it, she had used the Russian colours, symbol of the new ally of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another vexation of unfortunate <i>annexés</i> is in the matter of
+ bookbinding. French people naturally like to have their books bound in
+ French style, but it is next to impossible to get this done in Alsace. If
+ the books are bound in France, there is the extra cost of carriage and
+ duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very pleasant time I had under this French roof on German soil. Our days
+ were spent in walks and drives, our evenings entertained with music and
+ declamation. Now we had the Kreutzer Sonata exquisitely performed by
+ amateur musicians, now we listened to selections from Lamartine, Nadaud,
+ Victor Hugo and others, as admirably rendered by a member of this
+ accomplished family, all the members of which were now gathered together.
+ I saw something alike of their poorer and richer neighbours, all of course
+ being their country-people. This social circle, including the household
+ staff, was rigorously French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me now describe a Lorraine lunch, as the French <i>goûter</i> or
+ afternoon collation is universally called, our hosts being a family of
+ peasant farmers, their guests the house party from the château. We had
+ only to drive a mile or two before quitting annexed France for France
+ proper, the respective frontiers indicated by tall posts bearing the name
+ and eagle of the German Empire and the R.F. of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are now on French soil,&rdquo; said my host to me with a smile of
+ satisfaction, and the very horses seemed to realise the welcome fact.
+ Right merrily they trotted along, joyfully sniffing the air of home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lorraine villages are very unlike their spick and span neighbours of
+ Alsace, visited by me two years before. Why Catholic villages should be
+ dirty and Protestant ones clean, I will not attempt to explain. Such,
+ however, is the case. As we drove through the line of dung-heaps and
+ liquid manure rising above what looked like barns, I was ill-prepared for
+ the comfort and tidiness prevailing within. What a change when the door
+ opened, and our neatly dressed entertainers ushered us into their
+ dining-room! Here, looking on to a well-kept garden was a table spread
+ with spotless linen, covers being laid as in a middle-class house. An
+ armchair, invariable token of respect, was placed for the English visitor;
+ then we sat down to table, two blue-bloused men, uncle and nephew, and
+ three elderly women in mob caps and grey print gowns, dispensing
+ hospitality to their guests, belonging to the <i>noblesse</i> of Lorraine.
+ There was no show of subservience on the one part, or of condescension on
+ the other. Conversation flowed easily and gaily as at the château itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I here add that whilst the French <i>noblesse</i> and <i>bourgeoisie</i>
+ remain apart as before the Revolution, with the peasant folk it is not so.
+ These good people were not tenants or in any way dependents on my hosts.
+ They were simply humble friends, the great tie being that of nationality.
+ The order of the feast was peculiar. Being Friday no delicacy in the shape
+ of a raised game pie could be offered; we were, therefore, first of all
+ served with bread and butter and <i>vin ordinaire</i>. Then a dish of
+ fresh honey in the comb was brought out; next, a huge open plum tart. When
+ the tart had disappeared, cakes of various kinds and a bottle of good
+ Bordeaux were served; finally, grapes, peaches, and pears with choice
+ liqueurs. Healths were drunk, glasses chinked, and when at last the long
+ lunch came to an end, we visited dairy, bedrooms, and garden, all patterns
+ of neatness. This family of small peasant owners is typical of the very
+ best rural population in France. The united capital of the group&mdash;uncle,
+ aunts and nephew&mdash;would not perhaps exceed a few thousand pounds, but
+ the land descending from generation to generation had increased in value
+ owing to improved cultivation. Hops form the most important crop
+ hereabouts. This village of French Lorraine testified to the educational
+ liberality of the Republic. For the three hundred and odd souls the
+ Government here provides schoolmaster, schoolmistress, and a second female
+ teacher for the infant school, their salaries being double those paid
+ under the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now a word concerning the blood-tax. Rich and well-to-do French residents
+ in the annexed provinces can afford to send their sons across the frontier
+ and pay the heavy fines imposed for default. With the artisan and peasant
+ the case is otherwise. Here defection from military service means not only
+ lifelong separation but worldly ruin. To the wealthy an occasional sight
+ of their young soldiers in France is an easy matter. A poor man must stay
+ at home. If his sons quit Alsace-Lorraine in order to go through their
+ military service on French soil, they cannot return until they have
+ attained their forty-fifth year, and the penalty of default is so high
+ that it means, and is intended to mean, ruin. There is also another crying
+ evil of the system. French conscripts forced into the German Army are
+ always sent as far as possible from home. If they fall ill and die, kith
+ or kin can seldom reach them. Again, as French is persistently spoken in
+ the home, and German only learnt under protest at the primary school, the
+ young <i>annexé</i> enters upon his enforced military service with an
+ imperfect knowledge of the latter language, the hardships of his position
+ being thereby immensely enhanced. No one here hinted to me of any especial
+ severity being shown to French conscripts on this account, but we can
+ easily understand the disadvantage under which they labour. I visited a
+ tenant farmer on the other side of the frontier, whose only son had lately
+ died in hospital at Berlin. The poor father was telegraphed for but
+ arrived too late, the blow saddening for ever an honest and laborious
+ life. This farmer was well-to-do, but had other children. How then could
+ he pay the fine imposed upon the defaulter? And, of course, French service
+ involved lifelong separation. Cruel, indeed, is the dilemma of the
+ unfortunate <i>annexé</i>. But the blood-tax is felt in other ways. During
+ my third stay in Germanised Lorraine the autumn manoeuvres were taking
+ place. This means that alike rich and poor are compelled to lodge and cook
+ for as many soldiers as the authorities choose to impose upon them. I was
+ assured by a resident that poor people often bid the worn-out men to their
+ humble board, the conscripts&rsquo; fare being regulated according to the
+ strictest economy. In rich houses, German officers receive similar
+ hospitality, but we can easily understand under what conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The annexed provinces are of course being Germanised by force. Immigration
+ continues at a heavy cost. Here is an instance in point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Alsace was handed over to the German Government it boasted of
+ absolute solvency. It is now burdened with debt, owing, among many other
+ reasons, to the high salaries received by the more important German
+ officials; the explanation of this being that the position of these
+ functionaries is so unpleasant they have to be bribed into such
+ expatriation. Thus their salaries are double what they were under French
+ rule. Not that friction often occurs between the German civil authorities
+ and French subjects; everyone bears witness to the politeness of the
+ former, but it is impossible for them not to feel the distastefulness of
+ their own presence. On the other hand, the perpetual state of siege is a
+ grievance daily felt. Free speech, liberty of the press, rights of public
+ meeting, are unknown. Not long since, a peasant just crossed the frontier,
+ and as he touched French soil, shouted &ldquo;Vive la France!&rdquo; On his return he
+ was convicted of <i>lèse majesté</i> and sent to prison. Another story
+ points to the same moral. At a meeting of a village council an aged
+ peasant farmer, who cried &ldquo;We are not subjects but servants of William
+ II.&rdquo; Was imprisoned for six weeks. The occasion that called forth the
+ protest was an enforced levy for some public works of no advantage
+ whatever to the inhabitants. Sad indeed is the retrospect, sadder still
+ the looking forward, with which we quit French friends in the portions of
+ territory now known as Alsace-Lorraine. And when we say &ldquo;Adieu&rdquo; the word
+ has additional meaning. Epistolary intercourse, no more than table-talk,
+ is sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; IN GERMANISED ALSACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Who would quit Alsace without a pilgrimage to Saverne and the country home
+ in which Edmond About wrote his most delightful pages and in which he
+ dispensed such princely hospitality? The author of &ldquo;Le Fellah &ldquo; was forced
+ to forsake his beloved retreat after the events of 1870-1; the experiences
+ of this awful time are given in his volume &ldquo;Alsace,&rdquo; and dedicated to his
+ son&mdash;<i>pour qu&rsquo;il se souvienne</i>&mdash;in order that he might
+ remember. Here also as under that Lorraine roof I felt myself in France.
+ At the time of my visit the property was for sale. French people, however,
+ are loth to purchase estates in the country they may be said to inhabit on
+ sufferance, while rich Germans prefer to build palatial villas within the
+ triple fortifications and thirteen newly constructed forts which are
+ supposed to render Strasburg impregnable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The railway takes us from Strasburg in an hour to the picturesque old town
+ of Saverne, beautifully placed above the Zorn. Turning our backs upon the
+ one long street winding upwards to the château, we follow a road leading
+ into the farthermost recesses of the valley, from which rise on either
+ side the wooded spurs of the lower Vosges. Here in a natural <i>cul-de-sac</i>,
+ wedged in between pine-clad slopes, is as delightful a retreat as genius
+ or a literary worker could desire. On the superb September day of my visit
+ the place looked its best, and warm was the welcome we received from the
+ occupiers, a cultivated and distinguished French Protestant family,
+ formerly living at Srasburg, but since the events of 1870-1 removed to
+ Nancy. They hired this beautiful place from year to year, merely spending
+ a few weeks here during the Long Vacation. The intellectual atmosphere
+ still recalled bygone days, when Edmond About used to gather round him
+ literary brethren, alike French and foreign. Pleasant it was to find here
+ English-speaking, England-loving, French people. Nothing can be simpler
+ than the house itself, in spite of its somewhat pretentious tower of which
+ About wrote so fondly. His study is a small, low-pitched room, not too
+ well lighted, but having a lovely outlook; beyond, the long, narrow
+ gardens, fruit, flower and vegetable, one leading out of another, rising
+ pine woods and the lofty peaks of the Vosges. So remote is this spot that
+ wild deer venture into the gardens, whilst squirrels make themselves at
+ home close to the house doors. Our host gave me much information about the
+ peasants. Although not nearly so prosperous as before the annexation, they
+ are doing fairly well. Some, indeed, are well off, possessing capital to
+ the amount of several thousand pounds, whilst a millionaire, that is, the
+ possessor of a million francs or forty thousand pounds, is found here and
+ there. The severance from France entailed, however, one enormous loss on
+ the farmer. This was the withdrawal of tobacco culture, a monopoly of the
+ French State which afforded maximum profits to the cultivator. With regard
+ to the indebtedness of the peasant-owner, my informant said that it
+ certainly existed, but not to any great extent, usury having been
+ prohibited by the local Reichstag a few years before. Again I found myself
+ among French surroundings, French traditions, French speech. Let me add,
+ however, that I heard none of the passionate regrets, recriminations, and
+ wishes that had constantly fallen on my ears ten years before. One prayer,
+ and one only, seems in every heart, on every lip, &ldquo;Peace, peace&mdash;only
+ let us have peace!&rdquo; It must be borne in mind that 20,000 French Alsatians
+ quitted Strasburg alone, and that those of the better classes who were
+ unable to emigrate sent their young sons across the frontier before the
+ age of seventeen. Thus, by a gradual process, the French element is being
+ eliminated from the towns, whilst in the country annexation came in a very
+ different guise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This will be seen from the account of another excursion made with French
+ friends living in Strasburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a beautiful drive to Blaesheim, southwest of the city, in a direct
+ line with the Vosges and Oberlin&rsquo;s country. We pass the enormous public
+ slaughterhouses and interminable lines of brand-new barracks, then under
+ one of the twelve stone gates with double portals that now protect the
+ city, leaving behind us the tremendous earthworks and powder magazines,
+ and are soon in the open plain. This vast plain is fertile and well
+ cultivated. On either side we see narrow, ribbon-like strips of maize,
+ potatoes, clover, hops, beetroot, and hemp. There are no apparent
+ boundaries of the various properties and no trees or houses to break the
+ uniformity. The farm-houses and premises, as in the Pyrenees, are grouped
+ together, forming the prettiest, neatest villages imaginable. Entzheim is
+ one of these. The broad, clean street, the large white-washed timber
+ houses, with projecting porches and roofs, may stand for a type of the
+ Alsatian &ldquo;Dorf.&rdquo; The houses are white-washed outside once a year, the
+ mahogany-coloured rafters, placed crosswise, forming effective
+ ornamentation. No manure heaps before the door are seen here, as in
+ Brittany, all is clean and sightly. We meet numbers of pedestrians, the
+ women mostly wearing the Alsatian head-dress, an enormous bow of broad
+ black ribbon with long ends, worn fan-like on the head, and lending an air
+ of great severity. The remainder of the costume&mdash;short blue or red
+ skirt (the colours distinguishing Protestant and Catholic), gay kerchief,
+ and apron&mdash;have all but vanished. As we approach our destination the
+ outlines of the Vosges become more distinct, and the plain is broken by
+ sloping vineyards and fir woods. We see no labourers afield, and, with one
+ exception, no cattle. It is strange how often cattle are cooped up in
+ pastoral regions. The farming here is on the old plan, and milch cows are
+ stabled from January to December, only being taken out to water.
+ Agricultural machinery and new methods are penetrating these villages at a
+ snail&rsquo;s pace. The division of property is excessive. There are no
+ lease-holds, and every farmer, alike on a small or large scale, is an
+ owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two classes in Alsace have been partly won over to the German rule; one is
+ that of the Protestant clergy, the other that of the peasants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Third Empire persistently snubbed its Protestant subjects, then, as at
+ the time of the Revocation, numbering many most distinguished citizens. No
+ attempts, moreover, were made to Gallicise the German-speaking population
+ of the Rhine provinces. Thus the wrench was much less felt here than in
+ Catholic, French-speaking Lorraine. Higher stipends, good dwelling-houses
+ and schools, have done much to soften annexation to the clergy. An
+ afternoon &ldquo;at home&rdquo; in a country parsonage a few miles from Strasburg,
+ reminded me of similar functions in an English rectory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the parsonage of Blaesheim we were warmly welcomed by friends, and in
+ their pretty garden found a group of ladies and gentlemen playing at
+ croquet, among them two nice-looking girls wearing the Alsatian <i>coiffe</i>
+ that enormous construction of black ribbon just mentioned. These young
+ ladies were daughters of the village mayor, a rich peasant, and had been
+ educated in Switzerland, speaking French correctly and fluently. Many
+ daughters of wealthy peasants marry civilians at Strasburg, when they for
+ once and for all cast off the last feature of traditional costume. After a
+ little chat, and being bidden to return to tea in half an hour, we visited
+ some other old acquaintances of my friends, a worthy peasant family
+ residing close by. Here also a surprise was in store for me. The head of
+ the house and his wife&mdash;both far advanced in the sixties and who
+ might have walked out of one of Erckman-Chatrian&rsquo;s novels&mdash;could not
+ speak a word of French, although throughout the best part of their lives
+ they had been French subjects!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admirable types they were, but by no means given to sentiment or romance.
+ The good man assured me in his quaint patois that he did not mind whether
+ he was French, German, or, for the matter of that, English, so long as he
+ could get along comfortably and peacefully! He added, however, that under
+ the former <i>régime</i> taxes had been much lower and farming much more
+ profitable. The good folk brought out bread and wine, and we toasted each
+ other in right hearty fashion. Over the sideboard of their clean,
+ well-furnished sitting room hung a small photograph of William II. On our
+ return to our first host we found a sumptuous five o&rsquo;clock tea prepared
+ for the ladies, whilst more solid refreshments awaited the gentlemen in
+ the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in a remote corner of Alsace, memorialized by Germany&rsquo;s greatest
+ poet, we find pathetic clinging to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everyone has read the story of Goethe and Frederika, how the great poet,
+ then a student at the Strasburg University, was taken by a comrade to the
+ simple parsonage of Sesenheim, how the artless daughter of the house with
+ her sweet Alsatian songs, enchanted the brilliant youth, how he found
+ himself, as he tells us in his autobiography, suddenly in the immortal
+ family of the Vicar of Wakefield. &ldquo;And here comes Moses too!&rdquo; cried
+ Goethe, as Frederika&rsquo;s brother appeared. That accidental visit has in turn
+ immortalised Sesenheim. The place breathes of Frederika. It has become a
+ shrine dedicated to pure, girlish love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new line of railway takes us from Strasburg in about an hour over the
+ flat, monotonous stretch of country, so slowly crossed by diligence in
+ Goethe&rsquo;s time. The appearance of the city from this side&mdash;the French
+ side&mdash;is truly awful: we see fortification after fortification, with
+ vast powder magazines at intervals, on the outer earthworks bristling rows
+ of cannon, beyond, several of the thirteen forts constructed since the
+ war. The bright greenery of the turf covering these earthworks does not
+ detract from their dreadful appearance. Past the vast workshops and stores
+ of the railway station&mdash;a small town in itself&mdash;past market
+ gardens, hop gardens, hayfields, beech-woods, all drenched with a week of
+ rain, past old-world villages, the railway runs to Sesenheim, alongside
+ the high road familiar to Goethe. We alight at the neat, clean, trim
+ station (in the matter of cleanliness the new <i>regime</i> bears the palm
+ over the old), and take the flooded road to the village. An old, bent,
+ wrinkled peasant woman, speaking French, directs us for full information
+ about Frédérique&mdash;thus is the name written in French&mdash;to the
+ auberge. First, with no little interest and pride, she unhooks from her
+ own wall a framed picture, containing portraits of Goethe, and Frederika,
+ and drawings of church and parsonage as they were. The former has been
+ restored and the latter wholly rebuilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we make our way to the little inn over against these, we pass a new
+ handsome communal school in course of erection. On questioning two
+ children in French, they shake their heads and pass on. The thought
+ naturally arises&mdash;did the various French Governments, throughout the
+ period of a hundred and odd years ending in 1870, do much in the way of
+ assimilating the German population of Alsace?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would not seem so, seeing that up till the Franco-Prussian war the
+ country folk retained their German speech, or at least patois. Under the
+ present rule only German is taught in communal schools, and in the
+ gymnasiums or lycées, two hours a week only being allowed for the teaching
+ of French. At the Auberge du Bouf, over against the church and parsonage,
+ we chat with the master in French about Goethe and Frederika; his
+ womankind, however, only spoke patois. Here, nevertheless, we find French
+ hearts, French sympathies, and occasionally French gaiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unidyllic, yet full of instruction, is the drive in the opposite direction
+ to Kehl. We are here approaching friendly frontiers, yet the aspect is
+ hardly less dreadful. True that cannon do not bristle on the outer line of
+ the triple fortifications; otherwise the state of things is similar. We
+ see lines of vast powder magazines, enormous barracks of recent
+ construction, preparations for defence, on a scale altogether
+ inconceivable and indescribable. Little wonder that meat is a shilling a
+ pound, instead of fourpence as before the annexation, that bread has
+ doubled in price, taxation also, and, to make matters worse, that trade
+ has remained persistently dull!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tremendous triple-arched, stone gate, guarded by sentinels, has been
+ erected on this side of the lower Rhine, over against the Duchy of Baden.
+ No sooner are we through than our hearts are rejoiced with signs of peace
+ and innocent enjoyment, restaurants and coffee gardens, family groups
+ resting under the trees. Beyond, flowing briskly amid wooded banks to
+ right and left, is the Rhine, a glorious sight, compensating for so many
+ that have just given us the heartache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Strasburg I will say little. Full descriptions of the new city, for
+ such an expression is no figure of speech, are given in the English,
+ French, and German guide books. The first care of the German Government
+ after coming into possession was to repair the havoc caused by the
+ bombardment, the rebuilding of public buildings, monuments and streets
+ that had been partially or entirely destroyed in 1871. Among these were
+ the Museum and Public Library, the Protestant church, several orphanages
+ and hospitals, lastly, incredible as it may seem, the beautiful octagonal
+ tower of the Cathedral. The incidents of this vandalism have just been
+ graphically described in the new volume of the brothers&rsquo; Margueritte prose
+ epic, dealing with the Franco-Prussian War, entitled &ldquo;Les Braves Gens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember writing on the occasion of my first visit to Strasburg, a few
+ years after these events&mdash;&ldquo;There is very little to see at Strasburg
+ now. The Library with its priceless treasures of books and manuscripts,
+ the Museum of painting and sculpture, rich in <i>chefs d&rsquo;oeuvre</i> of the
+ French school, the handsome Protestant church, the theatre, the Palais de
+ Justice, were all completely destroyed by the Prussian bombardment, not to
+ speak of buildings of lesser importance, four hundred private dwellings,
+ and hundreds of civilians killed and wounded by the shells. Nor was the
+ cathedral spared, and would doubtless have perished altogether also but
+ for the enforced surrender of the heroic city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that sad time a new Strasburg has sprung up, of which the University
+ is the central feature. A thousand students now frequent this great school
+ of learning, the professorial staff numbering a hundred. One noteworthy
+ point is the excessive cheapness of a learned or scientific education.
+ Autocratic Prussia emulates democratic France. I was assured by an
+ Alsatian who had graduated here that a year&rsquo;s fees need not exceed ten
+ pounds! Students board and lodge themselves outside the University, and,
+ of course, as economically as they please. They consist chiefly of
+ Germans, for sons of French parents of the middle and upper ranks are sent
+ over the frontier before the age of seventeen in order to evade the German
+ military service. They thus exile themselves for ever. This cruel
+ severance of family ties is, as I have said, one of the saddest effects of
+ annexation. Without and within, the group of buildings forming the
+ University is of great splendour. Alike architecture and decoration are on
+ a costly scale; the vast corridors with tesselated marble floors, marble
+ columns, domes covered with frescoes, statuary, stained glass, and gilded
+ panels, must impress the mind of the poorer students. Less agreeable is
+ the reflection of the taxpayer. This new Imperial quarter represents
+ millions of marks, whilst the defences of Strasburg alone represent many
+ millions more. One of the five facultés is devoted to Natural Science. The
+ Museum of Natural History, the mineralogical collections, and the chemical
+ laboratories have each their separate building, whilst at the extreme end
+ of the University gardens is the handsome new observatory, with covered
+ way leading to the equally handsome residence of the astronomer in charge.
+ Thus the learned star-gazer can reach his telescope under cover in wintry
+ weather. In addition to the University library described above, the
+ various class-rooms have each small separate libraries, sections of
+ history, literature, etc., on which the students can immediately lay their
+ hands. All the buildings are heated with gas or water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just beyond these precincts we come upon a striking contrast&mdash;row
+ after row of brand-new barracks, military bakeries, foundries, and stores;
+ piles of cannon balls, powder magazines, war material, one would think,
+ sufficient to blow up all Europe. Incongruous indeed is this juxtaposition
+ of a noble seat of learning and militarism only commensurate with barbaric
+ times. A good way off is the School of Medicine. This, indeed, owes little
+ or nothing to the new régime, having been founded by the French Government
+ long before 1870. It is a vast group of buildings, one of which can only
+ be glanced at with a shudder. My friend pointed out to me an annexe or
+ &ldquo;vivisection department.&rdquo; Here, as he expressed it, is maintained quite a
+ menagerie of unhappy animals destined for the tortures of the vivisector&rsquo;s
+ knife. The very thought sickened me, and I was glad to give up
+ sight-seeing and drop in for half-an-hour&rsquo;s chat with a charming old lady,
+ French to the backbone, living under the mighty shadow of the Cathedral.
+ She entertained me with her experiences during the bombardment, when
+ cooped up with a hundred persons, rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, all
+ passing fifteen days in a dark, damp cellar. Many horrible stories she
+ related, but somehow they seemed less horrible than the thought of tame,
+ timid, and even affectionate and intelligent creatures, slowly and
+ deliberately tortured to death, for the sake, forsooth, of what? Of this
+ corporeal frame man himself has done his best to vitiate and dishonour,
+ mere clayey envelope&mdash;so theologians tell us&mdash;of an immortal
+ soul!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strasburg, like Metz, is one vast camp, at the time of this second visit
+ the forty thousand soldiers in garrison here were away for the manoeuvres.
+ In another week or two the town would swarm with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will now say a few words about the administration of the annexed
+ provinces, a subject on which exists much misapprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have explained, no liberty, as we understand it, exists for the
+ French subjects of the German Emperor, neither freedom of speech, nor of
+ the press, nor of public meeting are enjoyed in Alsace and the portion of
+ Lorraine no longer French. A rigorous censorship of books as well as
+ newspapers is carried on. Even religious worship is under perpetual
+ surveillance. One by one French pastors and priests are supplanted by
+ their German brethren. A much respected pastor of Mulhouse, long resident
+ in that city and ardently French, told me some years ago that he expected
+ to be the last of his countrymen permitted to officiate. Police officers
+ wearing plain clothes attend the churches in which French is still
+ permitted on Sunday. There is nothing that can be called representative or
+ real parliamentary government. The Stadtholder or Governor is in reality a
+ dictator armed with autocratic powers. He can, at a moment&rsquo;s notice, expel
+ citizens, or stop newspapers. As to administration, it rests in the hands
+ of the State Secretariat or body of Ministers, three in number. There is a
+ pretence at home rule, but one fact suffices to explain its character and
+ working. Of the thirty members forming the local Reichstag, sitting at
+ Strasburg, fifteen are always named by the Stadtholder himself. This
+ little Chamber of Deputies deliberates upon provincial affairs, all Bills
+ having to pass the Chamber at Berlin and receive the Imperial sanction
+ before becoming law. As to the party of protest in the Reichstag itself,
+ formerly headed by the late Jean Dollfuss, I was assured that it had
+ ceased to exist. Years before, then burdened with the weight of care and
+ years, the great patriot of Mulhouse had said to me, &ldquo;I no longer take my
+ seat at Berlin. Of what good?&rdquo; And were he living still, that great and
+ good man, burning as was his patriotism, inextinguishable as was his love
+ for France, would doubtless echo the words I now heard on every lip,
+ &ldquo;Peace, peace; only let us have peace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst at Strasburg German has crowded out French, at Mulhouse I found
+ French still universally spoken. The prohibition of native speech in
+ schools is not only a domestic but a commercial grievance. As extensive
+ business relations exist between the two countries, especially near the
+ frontier, a knowledge of both French and German is really necessary to all
+ classes. Even tourists in Alsace-Lorraine nowadays fare badly without some
+ smattering of the latter language. Hotel-keepers especially look to the
+ winning side, and do their very utmost to Germanise their establishments.
+ Shopkeepers must live, and find it not only advantageous but necessary to
+ follow the same course. Sad indeed is the spectacle of Germanised France!
+ Nemesis here faces us in militarism, crushing the people with taxation and
+ profoundly shocking the best instincts of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion I must do justice to the extreme courtesy of German railway
+ and other officials. Many employés of railways and post offices&mdash;all,
+ be it remembered, Government officials&mdash;do not speak any French at
+ all, especially in out-of-the-way places. At the same time, all officials,
+ down to the rural postman, will do their very best to help out
+ French-speaking strangers with their own scant vocabulary of French words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Alsatian hosts, one and all, I found quite ready to do justice to the
+ authorities and their representatives, but, as I have insisted upon
+ before, an insuperable barrier, the fathomless gulf created by injustice,
+ exists between conquerors and conquered. And only last year dining with my
+ hosts of Germanised Lorraine in Paris, I asked them if in this respect
+ matters had changed for the better. The answer I received was categoric&mdash;&ldquo;Nothing
+ is changed since your visit to us. French and Germans remain apart as
+ before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;East of Paris&rdquo; has led me somewhat farther than I intended, but to a
+ lover of France, no less than to a French heart, France beyond the Vosges
+ is France still!
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE END.
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/8734.txt b/8734.txt
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+++ b/8734.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: East of Paris
+ Sketches in the Gatinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne
+
+Author: Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8734]
+This file was first posted on August 5, 2003
+Last Updated: May 20, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST OF PARIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Carlo Traverso, Debra Storr, Sandra Brown,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+SKETCHES IN THE GATINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE
+
+
+By Miss Betham-Edwards
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Chap.
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+I.--MELUN
+
+II.--MORET-SUR-LOING
+
+III.--BOURRON
+
+IV.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+V.--BOURRON--_continued_
+
+VI.--LARCHANT
+
+VII.--RECLOSES
+
+VIII.--NEMOURS
+
+IX.--LA CHARITE-SUR-LOIRE
+
+X.--POUGUES
+
+XL.--NEVERS AND MOULINS
+
+XII.--SOUVIGNY AND SENS
+
+XIII.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE
+
+XIV.--ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--_continued_
+
+XV.--RHEIMS
+
+XVI.--RHEIMS--_continued_
+
+XVII.--SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE
+
+XVIII.--ST. JEAN DE LOSNE
+
+XIX.--NANCY
+
+XX.--IN GERMANISED LORRAINE
+
+XXI.--IN GERMANISED ALSACE
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+
+I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern
+France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French
+travel, no more than the _chefs-d'oeuvre_ of French literature, are
+unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing
+the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of
+Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as
+a wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their
+seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from "Notre Dame de
+Paris" or "Le Pere Goriot," to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so
+the sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of
+Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after
+the thundering Rhone. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes
+as we pic-nic on the Puy de Dome. More fondly still my memory clings
+to many a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its
+vine-clad hills or of Autun as approached from Pre Charmoy, to me, the
+so familiar home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however,
+the natural marvels of France, like those of any other country, can be
+catalogued, French scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so,
+having visited, re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon
+on the European map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a
+veritable _embarras de richesses_. And many of the spots here described
+will, I have no doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to
+myself--_Larchant_ with its noble tower rising from the plain,
+recalling the still nobler ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the
+Sahara--_Recloses_ with its pictorial interiors and grand promontory
+overlooking a panorama of forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked
+by a single sail--_Moret_ with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows
+which of the two being the more attractive--_Nemours_, favourite haunt
+of Balzac, memoralized in "Ursule Mirouet"--_La Charite_, from
+whose old-world dwellings you may throw pebbles into the broad blue
+Loire--_Pougues_, the prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented
+by Mme. de Sevigne and valetudinarians of the Valois race generations
+before her time--_Souvigny_, cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast
+congeries of abbatial ruins--_Arcis-sur-Aube_, the sweet riverside home
+of Danton--its near neighbour, _Bar-sur-Aube_, connected with a bitterer
+enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great revolutionary himself, the
+infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace. These are a few of the
+sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I have returned again and
+again, ever finding "harbour and good company." And these journeys, I
+should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once more to that sad
+yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French, to hearts as
+devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed provinces
+twenty years ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+EAST OF PARIS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+MELUN
+
+Scores upon scores of times had I steamed past Melun in the Dijon
+express, ever eyeing the place wistfully, ever too hurried, perhaps too
+lazy, to make a halt. Not until September last did I carry out a long
+cherished intention. It is unpardonable to pass and re-pass any French
+town without alighting for at least an hour's stroll!
+
+Melun, capital of the ancient Gatinais, now chef-lieu of the Department
+of Seine and Marne, well deserves a visit. Pretty as Melun looks from
+the railway it is prettier still on nearer approach. The Seine here
+makes a loop, twice curling round the town with loving embrace, its
+walls and old world houses to-day mirrored in the crystal-clear river.
+Like every other French town, small or great, Melun possesses its outer
+ring of shady walks, boulevards lying beyond the river-side quarters.
+The place has a busy, prosperous, almost metropolitan look, after the
+village just left. [Footnote: For symmetry's sake I begin these records
+at Melun, although I halted at the place on my way from my third sojourn
+at Bourron.] The big, bustling Hotel du Grand Monarque too, with its
+brisk, obliging landlady, invited a stay. Dr. Johnson, perhaps the
+wittiest if the completest John Bull who ever lived, was not far wrong
+when he glorified the inn. "Nothing contrived by man," he said, "has
+produced so much happiness (relaxation were surely the better word?) as
+a good tavern." Do we not all, to quote Falstaff, "take our ease at our
+inn," under its roof throwing off daily cares, assuming a holiday mood?
+
+A survey of the yard awoke another train of reflections. It really seems
+as if the invention of the motor car were bringing back ante-railway
+days for the tourist and the travelling world, recalling family coach
+and post-chaise. The place was crowded with motor cars of all shapes
+and sizes, some of these were plain, shabby gigs and carts of commercial
+travellers, others, landaus, waggonettes and victorias of rich folks
+seeing the world in their own carriage as their ancestors had done
+generations before; one turn-out suggested royalty or a Rothschild, I
+was about to say, rather I should name a Chicago store-keeper, since
+American millionaires are the Haroun-el-Raschids of the twentieth
+century. This last was a sumptuously fitted up carriage having a seat
+behind for servants, accommodating eight persons in all. There was
+also a huge box for luggage. It would be interesting to know how much
+petroleum, electricity, or alcohol such a vehicle would consume in a
+day. The manufacture of motor cars must be a very flourishing business
+in France, next, I should say, to that of bicycles. Of these also there
+was a goodly supply in the entrance hall of the inn, and the impetus
+given to travel by both motor car and bicycle was here self-evident.
+The Hotel du Grand Monarque literally swarmed with tourists, one and all
+French folks taking their ease at their inn. And our neighbours do not
+take their pleasure solemnly after the manner of the less impressionable
+English. Stay-at-home as they have hitherto been, home-loving as they
+essentially are, the atmosphere of an inn, the aroma of a holiday, fill
+the Frenchman's cup of hilarity to overflowing, rendering gayer the
+gayest.
+
+The invention and rapidly spreading use of the motor car in France shows
+the French character under its revolutionary aspect, yet no people on
+the face of the earth are in many respects so conservative. We English
+folks want a new "Where is it?" for social purposes every year, the
+majority of our friends and acquaintances changing their houses almost
+as often as milliners and tailors change the fashion in bonnets and
+coats. A single address book for France supplies a life-time. The
+explanation is obvious. For the most part we live in other folks' houses
+whilst French folks, the military and official world excepted, occupy
+their own. Revisit provincial gentry or well-to-do bourgeoisie after
+an interval of a quarter of a century, you always find them where they
+were. Interiors show no more change than the pyramids of Egypt. Not so
+much as sixpence has been laid out upon new carpets or curtains. Could
+grandsires and granddames return to life like the Sleeping Beauty, they
+would find that the world had stood still during their slumber.
+
+Melun possesses perhaps one of the few statues that may not be called
+superfluous, and I confess I had been attracted thither rather by
+memories of its greatest son than by its picturesque scenery and fine
+old churches. The first translator of Plutarch into his native tongue
+was born here, and as we should expect, has been worthily commemorated
+by his fellow citizens. A most charming statue of Amyot stands in front
+of the grey, turreted Hotel de Ville. In sixteenth century doctoral
+dress, loose flowing robes and square flat cap, sits the great
+scholiast, as intently absorbed in his book as St. Jerome in the
+exquisite canvas of our own National Gallery.
+
+Behind the Hotel de Ville an opening shows a small, beautifully kept
+flower garden, just now a blaze of petunias, zinnias, and a second crop
+of roses. Long I lingered before this noble monument, one only of the
+many raised to Amyot's memory, of whom Montaigne wrote:--
+
+"Ignoramuses that we are, we should all have been lost, had not this
+book (the translation of Plutarch) dragged us out of the mire; thanks to
+it, we now venture to write and to discourse."
+
+And musing on the scholar and his kindred, a favourite line of
+Browning's came into my mind--
+
+"This man decided not to live but to know."
+
+Indeed the whole of "A Grammarian's Funeral" were here appropriate. Is
+it not men after this type of whom we feel
+
+ "Our low life was the level's and the night's.
+ He's for the morning"?
+
+To my surprise I found the church of St. Aspais locked. A courteous
+hair-dresser thereupon told me that all churches in Melun were closed
+from noon till half past one, but that, as noon had only just struck,
+if I were brisk I might possibly catch the sacristan. After a pretty hot
+chase I succeeded in finding a deaf, decrepit, dingy old man who showed
+me round the church, although evidently very impatient for his mid-day
+meal. He informed me that this closing of churches at Melun had been
+necessitated of late years by a series of robberies. From twelve till
+half past one o'clock no worshippers are present as a rule, hence the
+thieves' opportunity. Unfortunately marauders do not strip beautiful
+interiors of the tinselly gew-gaws that so often deface them; in this
+respect, however, St. Aspais being comparatively an exception. Alike
+within and without the proportions are magnificent, and the old stained
+glass is not marred by modern crudities. I do not here by any means
+exhaust the sights of this ancient town, from which, by the way,
+Barbizon is now reached in twenty minutes, an electric tramway plying
+regularly between Melun and that famous art pilgrimage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+MORET-SUR-LOING.
+
+The valley of the Loing abounds in captivating spots, Moret-sur-Loing
+bearing the palm. Over the ancient town, bird-like broods a majestic
+church, as out-spread wings its wide expanse of roof, while below by
+translucent depths and foliage richly varied, stretch quarters old and
+new, the canal intersecting the river at right angles. Lovely as is the
+river on which all who choose may spend long summer days, the canal to
+my thinking is lovelier still. Straight as an arrow it saunters between
+avenues of poplar, the lights and shadows of wood and water, the
+sunburnt, stalwart barge folk, their huge gondoliers affording endless
+pictures. Hard as is undoubtedly the life of the rope tower, rude as
+may appear this amphibious existence, there are cheerful sides to the
+picture. Many of these floating habitations possess a fireside nook cosy
+as that of a Parisian concierge, I was never tired of strolling along
+the canal and watching the barge folk. One day a friend and myself found
+a large barge laden with coal at the head of the canal, the huge dark
+framework and its sombre burden lighted up with touches of grace and
+colour. At the farther end of the vessel was hung a cage of canaries, at
+the other end was a stand of pot-flowers, geraniums and petunias in full
+bloom and all the more brilliant by virtue of contrast. A neighbour
+of the bargeman, a bright, intelligent woman, brown as a gipsy but
+well-spoken and of tidy appearance, invited us to enter. Imagine the
+neatest, prettiest little room in the world, parlour, bedchamber and
+kitchen in one, every object so placed as to make the most of available
+space. On a small side-table--and of course under such circumstances
+each article must be sizable--stood a sewing machine, in the corner was
+a bedstead with exquisitely clean bedding, in another a tiny cooking
+stove. Vases of flowers, framed pictures and ornamental quicksilver
+balls had been found place for, this bargewoman's home aptly
+illustrating Shakespeare's adage--"Order gives all things view." The
+brisk, weather-beaten mistress now came up, no little gratified by our
+interest and our praises.
+
+"You ladies would perhaps like to make a little journey with me?" she
+asked, "nothing easier, we start to-morrow morning at six o'clock for
+Nevers, you could take the train back."
+
+Never perhaps in our lives had myself and my companion received an
+invitation so out of the way, so bewilderingly tempting! And we felt
+too, with a pang, that never again in all probability should we receive
+such another. But on this especial day we were not staying at Moret,
+only running over for the afternoon from our headquarters at Bourron.
+Acceptance was thus hemmed round with small impediments. And by way
+of consolation, next morning the glorious weather broke. A downpour
+recalling our own lakeland would anyhow have kept us ashore.
+
+"Another time then!" had said the kind hostess of the barge at parting.
+She seemed as sorry as ourselves that the little project she had mooted
+so cordially could not be carried out.
+
+The Loing canal joins the Seine at Saint Mammes, a few kilometres lower
+down, continuing its course of thirty kilometres to Bleneau in the
+Nievre. Canal life in Eastern France is a characteristic feature, the
+whole region being intersected by a network of waterways, those _chemins
+qui marchent_, or walking roads as Michelet picturesquely calls them.
+And strolling on the banks of the canal here you may be startled by
+an astonishing sight, you see folks walking, or apparently walking, on
+water. Standing bolt upright on a tiny raft, carefully maintaining their
+balance, country people are towed from one side to the other.
+
+These suburban and riverside quarters are full of charm. The soft reds
+and browns of the houses, the old-world architecture and romantic sites,
+tempt an artist at every turn. And all in love with a Venetian existence
+may here find it nearer home.
+
+A few villas let furnished during the summer months have little lawns
+winding down to the water's edge and a boat moored alongside. Thus their
+happy inmates can spend hot, lazy days on the river.
+
+Turning our backs on the canal, by way of ivy-mantled walls, ancient
+mills and tumbledown houses, we reach the Porte du Pont or Gate of the
+Bridge. With other towns of the period, Moret was fortified. The girdle
+of walls is broken and dilapidated, whilst firm as when erected in the
+fourteenth century still stand the city gates.
+
+Of the two the Porte du Pont is the least imposing and ornamental, but
+it possesses a horrifying interest. In an upper storey is preserved one
+of those man-cages said to have been invented for the gratification of
+Louis XI, that strange tyrant to whose ears were equally acceptable the
+shrieks of his tortured victims and the apt repartee of ready-witted
+subjects.
+
+"How much do you earn a day?" he once asked a little scullion, as
+incognito he entered the royal kitchen.
+
+"By God's grace as much as the King," replied the lad; "I earn my bread
+and he can do no more."
+
+So pleased was the King with this saying that it made the speaker's
+fortune.
+
+We climb two flights of dark, narrow stone stairs reaching a bare
+chamber having small apertures, enlargements of the mere slits formerly
+admitting light and air. The man-cage occupies one corner. It is made of
+stout oaken ribs strongly bound together with iron, its proportions just
+allowing the captive to lie down at full length and take a turn of two
+or three steps. De Commines tells us that the cage invented by Cardinal
+Balue, and in which he languished for eleven years, was narrower still.
+An average sized man could not stand therein upright.
+
+The bolts and bars are still in perfect order. Nothing more brings home
+to us the abomination of the whole thing than to see the official draw
+these Brobdingnagian bolts and turn these gigantic keys. The locksmith's
+art was but too well understood in those days. By whom and for whom this
+living tomb was made or brought hither local records do not say.
+
+From a stage higher up a magnificent panorama is obtained, Moret, old
+and new, set round with the green and the blue, its greenery and bright
+river, far away its noble aqueduct, further still looking eastward
+the valley of the Loing spread out as a map, the dark ramparts of
+Fontainebleau forest half framing the scene.
+
+The town itself is a trifle unsavoury and unswept. Municipal authorities
+seem particularly stingy in the matter of brooms, brushes and
+water-carts. Such little disagreeables must not prevent the traveller
+from exploring every corner. But the real, the primary attraction of
+Moret lies less in its historic monuments and antiquated streets than
+in its _chemins qui marchent_, its ever reposeful water-ways. Like most
+French towns Moret is linked with English history. Its fine old church
+was consecrated by Thomas a-Becket in 1166. Three hundred years later
+the town was taken by Henry V., and re-taken by Charles VII. a decade
+after. Not long since five hundred skulls supposed to have been those
+of English prisoners were unearthed here; as they were all found massed
+together, the theory is that the entire number had surrendered and been
+summarily decapitated, methods of warfare that have apparently found
+advocates in our own day.
+
+Most visitors to Paris will have had pointed out to them the so-called
+"Maison Francois Premier" on the Cour La Reine. This richly ornate and
+graceful specimen of Renaissance architecture formerly stood at Moret,
+and bit by bit was removed to the capital in 1820. A spiral stone
+staircase and several fragments of heraldic sculpture were left behind.
+Badly placed as the house was here, it seems a thousand pities that
+Moret should have thus been robbed of an architectural gem Paris could
+well have spared.
+
+My first stay at Moret three years ago lasted several weeks. I had
+joined friends occupying a pretty little furnished house belonging
+to the officiating Mayor. We lived after simplest fashion but to our
+hearts' content. One of those indescribably obliging women of all work,
+came every day to cook, clean and wait on us. Most of our meals were
+taken among our flower beds and raspberry bushes. The only drawback to
+enjoyment may at first sight appear unworthy of mention, but it was not
+so. We had no latchkey. Now as every-one of all work knows, they are
+constantly popping in and out of doors, one moment they are off to
+market, the next to warm up their husbands' soup, and so on and so on.
+As for ourselves, were we not at Moret on purpose to be perpetually
+running about also? Thus it happened that somebody or other was always
+being locked out or locked in; either Monsieur finding the household
+abroad had pocketed the key and instead of returning in ten minutes'
+time had lighted upon a subject he must absolutely sketch then and
+there; or Madame could not get through her shopping as expeditiously as
+she had hoped; or their guest returned from her walk long before she
+was due; what with one miscalculation and another, now one of us had to
+knock at a neighbour's door, now another effected an entrance by means
+of a ladder, and now the key would be wholly missing and for the time
+being we were roofless, as if burnt out of house and home. Sometimes we
+were locked in, sometimes we were locked out, a current "Open Sesame" we
+never had.
+
+But no "regrettable incidents" marred a delightful holiday. Imbroglios
+such as these only leave memories to smile at, and add zest to
+recollection.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+BOURRON.
+
+Two years ago some Anglo-French friends joyfully announced their
+acquisition of a delightful little property adjoining Fontainebleau
+forest. "Come and see for yourself," they wrote, "we are sure that
+you will be charmed with our purchase!" A little later I journeyed to
+Bourron, half an hour from Moret on the Bourbonnais line, on arriving
+hardly less disconcerted than Mrs. Primrose by the gross of green
+spectacles. No trim, green verandahed villa, no inviting vine-trellised
+walk, no luxuriant vegetable garden or brilliant flower beds greeted my
+eyes; instead, dilapidated walls, abutting on these a peasant's cottage,
+and in front an acre or two of bare dusty field! My friends had indeed
+become the owners of a dismantled bakery and its appurtenances, to the
+uninitiated as unpromising a domain as could well be imagined. But
+I discovered that the purchasers were wiser in their generation than
+myself. Noticing my crestfallen look they had said:--
+
+"Only wait till next year, and you will see what a bargain we have made.
+You will find us admirably housed and feasting on peaches and grapes."
+
+True enough, twelve months later, I found a wonderful transformation.
+That a substantial dwelling now occupied the site of the dismantled
+bakery was no matter for surprise, the change out of doors seemed
+magical. Nothing could have looked more unpromising than that stretch
+of field, a mere bit of waste, your feet sinking into the sand as if you
+were crossing the desert. Now, the longed-for _tonnelle_ or vine-covered
+way offered shade, petunias made a splendid show, choice roses scented
+the air, whilst the fruit and vegetables would have done credit to a
+market-gardener. Peaches and grapes ripened on the wall, big turnips and
+tomatoes brilliant as vermilion took care of themselves. It was not only
+a case of the wilderness made to blossom as the rose, but of the horn
+of plenty filled to overflowing, prize flowers, fruit and vegetables
+everywhere. For the soil hereabouts, if indeed soil it can be called,
+and the climate of Bourron, possess very rare and specific qualities. On
+this light, dry sand, or dust covering a substratum of rock, vegetation
+springs up all but unbidden, and when once above ground literally takes
+care of itself. As to climate, its excellence may be summed up in
+the epithet, anti-asthmatic. Although we are on the very hem of forty
+thousand acres of forest, the atmosphere is one of extraordinary
+dryness. Rain may fall in torrents throughout an entire day. The sandy
+soil is so thorough an absorbent that next morning the air will be as
+dry as usual.
+
+This house reminded me of a tiny side door opening into some vast
+cathedral. We cross the threshold and find ourselves at once in the
+forest, in close proximity moreover to its least-known but not least
+majestic sites. We may turn either to right or left, gradually climbing
+a densely wooded headland. The first ascent lands us in an hour on the
+Redoute de Bourron, the second, occupying only half the time, on a
+spur of the forest offering a less famous but hardly less magnificent
+perspective, nothing to mar the picture as a whole, sunny plain, winding
+river and scattered townlings looking much as they must have done to
+Balzac when passing through three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+This eastern verge of the Fontainebleau forest is of especial beauty;
+the frowning headlands seem set there as sentinels jealously guarding
+its integrity, on the watch against human encroachments, defying time
+and change and cataclysmal upheaval. Boldly stands out each wooded crag,
+the one confronting the rising, the other the sinking sun, behind both
+massed the world of forest, spread before them as a carpet, peaceful
+rural scenes.
+
+I must now describe a spot, the name of which will probably be new to
+all excepting close students of Balzac. The great novelist loved the
+valley of the Loing almost as fondly as his native Touraine; and if
+these pastoral scenes did not inspire a _chef d'oeuvre_, they have
+thereby immensely gained in interest. "Ursule Mirouet," of which I shall
+have more to say further on, is not to be compared to such masterpieces
+as "Eugenie Grandet." But a leading incident of "Ursule Mirouet" occurs
+at Bourron--a sufficient reason for recalling the story here.
+
+The beauty of our village, like the beauty of French women, to quote
+Michelet, "is made up of little nothings." There are a hundred and
+one pretty things to see but very few to describe. Who could wish it
+otherwise? Little nothings of an engaging kind better agree with us
+as daily fare than the seven wonders of the world. With forty thousand
+acres of forest at our doors we do not want M. Mattel's newly discovered
+underground river within reach as well.
+
+From our garden we yet look upon scenes not of every day. Those sweeps
+of bluish-green foliage strikingly contrasted with the brilliant vine
+remind us that we are in France, and in a region with most others having
+its specialities. Asparagus, not literally but figuratively, nourishes
+the entire population of Bourron. Everyone here is a market gardener on
+his own account, and the cultivation of asparagus for the Paris markets
+is a leading feature of local commerce.
+
+There is no more graceful foliage than that of this plant, and
+gratefully the eye rests upon these waves of delicate green under a
+blazing, grape-ripening sky. Making gold-green lines between are vines,
+a succession of asparagus beds and vineyards separating our village from
+its better known and more populous neighbour, Marlotte. In the opposite
+direction we see brown-roofed, white-walled houses surmounted by a
+pretty little spire. This is Bourron. To reach it we pass a double row
+of homesteads, rustic interiors of small farmer or market gardener,
+the one, as our French neighbours say, more picturesque than the other.
+Each, no matter how ill kept, is set off by an ornamental border,
+zinnias, begonias, roses and petunias as obviously showing signs of care
+and science. Oddly enough the finest display of flowers often adorns
+the least tidy premises. And oddly enough, rather perhaps as we should
+expect it, in not one, but in every respect, this French village is the
+exact opposite of its English counterpart. In England every tenant of
+a cottage pays rent, there, not an inhabitant, however poor, but sits
+under his own vine and his own fig-tree. In England the farm-house faces
+the road and the premises lie behind. Here manure-heap, granary and pig
+styes open on the highway, the dwellings being at the back. In England
+a man's home, called his castle, is no more defended than the Bedouin's
+tent. Here at nightfall the small peasant proprietor is as securely
+entrenched within walls as a feudal baron in his moated chateau. In
+England ninety-nine householders out of a hundred are perpetually
+changing their domicile. Here folks live and die under the paternal
+roof that has sheltered generations. Nor does diversity end with
+circumstances and surroundings. As will be seen in another chapter,
+habits of life, modes of thought and standards of duty show contrasts
+equally marked.
+
+Bourron possesses twelve hundred and odd souls, most of whom are
+peasants who make a living out of their small patrimony. Destined
+perhaps one day to rival its neighbour Marlotte in popularity--even
+to become a second Barbizon--it is as yet the sleepiest, most
+rustic retreat imaginable. The climate would appear to be not only
+anti-asthmatic but anti-everything in the shape of malady. Anyhow,
+if folks fall ill they have to send elsewhere for a doctor. Minor
+complaints--cuts, bruises and snake bites--are attended to by a
+Fontainebleau chemist. Every day we hear the horn of his messenger who
+cycles through the village calling for prescriptions and leaving drugs
+and draughts.
+
+A post office, of course, Bourron possesses, but let no one imagine
+that a post office in out of the way country places implies a supply of
+postage stamps. English people are the greatest scribblers by post in
+the world, whilst our wiser French neighbours appear to be the laziest.
+An amusing dilemma had occurred here just before my arrival. One day my
+friends applied to the post office for stamps, but none were to be had
+for love or money. Off somebody cycled to Marlotte, which possesses not
+only a post and telegraph, but a money order office as well--same
+reply, next the adjoining village of Grez was visited and with no better
+result--"Supplies have not yet reached us from headquarters," said the
+third postmistress.
+
+Perhaps instead of smiling contemptuously we should take a moral to
+heart. The amount of time, money, eyesight and handcraft expended among
+ourselves on letter writing so-called is simply appalling. Was it
+not Napoleon who said that all letters if left unanswered for a month
+answered themselves? Too many Englishwomen spend the greater portion
+of the day in what is no longer a delicate art, but mere time-killing,
+after the manner of patience, games of cards and similar pastimes.
+
+Bourron is a most orderly village; within its precincts liberty is not
+allowed to degenerate into licence. As in summer-time folks are fond of
+spending their evenings abroad, a municipal law has enforced quiet after
+ten o'clock. Thus precisely on the stroke of ten, alike cafe, garden,
+private summer-house or doorstep are deserted, everyone betakes himself
+indoors, leaving his neighbours to enjoy unbroken repose. A most
+salutary by-law! Would it were put in force throughout the length and
+breadth of France! At Chatouroux I have been kept awake all night by
+the gossip of a _sergeant de ville_ and a lounger close to my window. At
+Tours, La Chatre and Bourges my fellow-traveller and myself could get
+no sleep on account of street revellers, whilst at how many other places
+have not holiday trips been spoiled by unquiet nights? All honour then
+to the aediles of dear little Bourron!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued_.
+
+Forty thousand acres of woodland at one's doors would seem a fact
+sufficiently suggestive; to particularize the attractions of Bourron
+after this statement were surely supererogation. Yet, for my own
+pleasure as much as for the use of my readers, I must jot down one or
+two especially persistent memories, impressions of solemnity, beauty and
+repose never to be effaced.
+
+Of course it is only the cyclist who can realise such an immensity as
+the Fontainebleau forest. From end to end these vast sweeps are now
+intersected by splendid roads and by-roads. Old-fashioned folks, for
+whom the horseless vehicle came too late, can but envy wheelmen and
+wheelwomen as they skim through vista after vista, outstripping one's
+horse and carriage as a greyhound outstrips a decrepit poodle. On the
+other hand only inveterate loiterers, the Lazy Lawrences of travel,
+can appreciate the subtler beauties of this woodland world. There
+are certain sights and sounds not to be caught by hurried observers,
+evanescent aspects of cloud-land and tree-land, rock and undergrowth,
+passing notes of bird and insect, varied melodies, if we may so express
+it, of summer breeze and autumn wind--in fine, a dozen experiences
+enjoyed one day, not repeated on the next. The music of the forest is
+a quiet music and has to be listened for, hardly on the cyclist's ear
+falls the song or rather accompaniment of the grasshopper, "the Muse of
+the wayside," a French poet has so exquisitely apostrophized.
+
+One's forest companion should be of a taciturn and contemplative turn.
+Only thus can we drink in the sense of such solitude and immensity;
+realizing to the full what indeed these words may mean, he may wander
+for hours without encountering a soul, very few birds are heard by the
+way, but the hum of the insect world, that dreamy go-between, hardly
+silence, hardly to be called noise, keeps us perpetual company, and our
+eyes must ever be open for beautiful little living things. Now a green
+and gold lizard flashes across a bit of grey rock, now a dragon-fly
+disports its sapphire wings amid the yellowing ferns or purple ling,
+butterflies, white, blue, and black and orange, flit hither and
+thither, whilst little beetles, blue as enamel beads, enliven the mossy
+undergrowth.
+
+One pre-eminent charm indeed of the Fontainebleau forest is this wealth
+of undergrowth, bushes, brambles and ferns making a second lesser
+thicket on all sides. In sociable moods delightful it is to go
+a-blackberrying here. I am almost tempted to say that if you want
+to realise the lusciousness of a hedgerow dessert you must cater for
+yourself in these forty thousand acres of blackberry orchard.
+
+But the foremost, the crowning excellence of Fontainebleau forest
+consists in its variety. France itself, the "splendid hexagon," with its
+mountains, rivers and plains, is hardly more varied than this vast area
+of rock and woodland. We can choose between sites, savage or idyllic,
+pastoral or grandiose, here finding a sunny glade, the very spot for a
+picnic, there break-neck declivities and gloomy chasms. The magnificent
+ruggedness of Alpine scenery is before our eyes, without the awfulness
+of snow-clad peaks or the blinding dazzle of glacier. In more than one
+place we could almost fancy that some mountain has been upheaved and
+split asunder, the clefts formed by these gigantic fragments being now
+filled with veteran trees.
+
+The formation of the forest has puzzled geologists, to this day the
+origin of its rocky substratum remaining undetermined.
+
+Within half an hour's stroll of Bourron lies the so-called "Mare aux
+Fees" or Fairies' Mere, as sweet a spot to boil one's kettle in as
+holiday makers can desire, at the same time affording the best possible
+illustration of what I have just insisted upon. For this favourite
+resort is in a certain sense microcosmic, giving in miniature those
+characteristics for which the forest is remarkable. Smooth and sunny as
+a garden plot is the open glade wherein we now halt for tea, and while
+the kettle boils we have time for a most suggestive bird's eye view. It
+is a little world that we survey from the borders of this rock-hemmed,
+forest-girt lake, one perspective after another with varying gradations
+of colour making us realize the many-featured, chequered area spread
+before us. From this coign of vantage are discerned alike the sterner
+and the more smiling beauties of the forest, rocky defiles, gloomy
+passes, sunlit lawns and mossy dells, scenery varied in itself and
+yet varying again with the passing hour and changing month. And such
+suggestion of almost infinite variety is not gained only from the
+Fairies' Mere. From a dozen points, not the same view but the same kind
+of view may be obtained, each differing from the other, except in charm
+and immensity. Within a walk of home also stands one of the numerous
+monuments scattered throughout the forest. The Croix de Saint Herem, now
+a useful landmark for cyclists, has a curious history. It was erected in
+1666 by a certain Marquis de Saint-Herem, celebrated for his ugliness,
+and centuries later was the scene of the most extraordinary rendezvous
+on record. Here, in 1804, every detail having been theatrically arranged
+beforehand, took place the so-called chance meeting of Napoleon and Pope
+Pius VII. The Emperor had arranged a grand hunt for that day, and in
+hunting dress, his dogs at his heels, awaited the pontiff by the cross
+of Saint Herem. As the pair lovingly embraced each other the Imperial
+horses ran away; this apparent escapade formed part of the programme,
+and Napoleon stepped into the Pope's carriage, seating himself on his
+visitor's, rather his prisoner's, right. A few years later another
+rencontre not without historic irony took place here. In 1816, Louis
+XVIII. received on this spot the future mother, so it was hoped, of
+French Kings, the adventurous Caroline of Naples, afterwards Duchesse de
+Berri.
+
+The crosses monuments of the forest are usefully catalogued in local
+guide-books, and many have historic associations. The most interesting
+of these--readers will excuse the Irish bull--is a monument that may be
+said never to have existed!
+
+The great Polish patriot Kosciusko spent the last fifteen years of his
+life in a hamlet near Nemours, and on his death the inhabitants of that
+and neighbouring villages projected a double memorial, in other words,
+a tiny chapel, the ruins of which are still seen near Episy, and a mound
+to be added to every year and to be called "La Montagne de Kosciusko,"
+or Kosciusko's mountain. Particulars of this generous and romantic
+scheme are preserved in the archives of Montigny. The inauguration
+of the mound took place on the ninth of October 1836. To the sound
+of martial music, drums and cannon, the first layers of earth were
+deposited, men, women and children taking part in the proceedings.
+A year later no less than ten thousand French friends of Poland with
+mattock and spade added several feet to Kosciusko's mountain. But the
+celebration got noised abroad. Afraid of anti-Russian manifestations the
+government of Louis Philippe prohibited any further Polish fetes. Thus
+it came about that, as I have said, the most interesting monument in the
+forest remains an idea. And all things considered, neither French nor
+English admirers of the exiled hero could to-day very well carve on the
+adjoining rock,
+
+ "And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell."
+
+Some time or other the Russian Imperial pair may visit Fontainebleau,
+whilst an English tourist with _The Daily Mail_ in his pocket would
+naturally and sheepishly look the other way.
+
+Another half hour's stroll and we find ourselves in an atmosphere of
+art, fashion and sociability. Only a mile either of woodland, field path
+or high road separates Bourron from its more populous and highly popular
+neighbour, Marlotte. Here every house has an artist's north window, the
+road is alive with motor cars, you can even buy a newspaper! Marlotte
+possesses a big, I should say comfortable, hotel, is very cosmopolitan
+and very pretty. Anglo-French households here, as at Bourron, favour
+Anglo-French relations. In Marlotte drawing-rooms we are in France,
+but always with a pleasant reminder of England and of true English
+hospitality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+BOURRON--_continued._
+
+I will now say something about my numerous acquaintances at Bourron.
+After three summer holidays spent in this friendly little spot I can
+boast of a pretty large visiting list, the kind of list requiring no
+cards or ceremonious procedure. My hostess, a Frenchwoman, and myself
+used to drop in for a chat with this neighbour and that whenever we
+passed their way, always being cheerily welcomed and always pressed to
+stay a little longer.
+
+The French peasant is the most laborious, at the same time the most
+leisurely, individual in the world. Urgent indeed must be those
+farming operations that prevent him from enjoying a talk. Conversation,
+interchange of ideas, give and take by word of mouth, are as necessary
+to the Frenchman's well-being as oxygen to his lungs.
+
+"Man," writes Montesquieu, "is described as a sociable animal." From
+this point of view it appears to me that the Frenchman may be called
+more of a man than others; he is first and foremost a man, since he
+seems especially made for society.
+
+Elsewhere the same great writer adds:--"You may see in Paris individuals
+who have enough to live upon for the rest of their days, yet they labour
+so arduously as to shorten their days, in order, as they say, to assure
+themselves of a livelihood." These two marked characteristics are as
+true of the French peasant now-a-days as of the polite society described
+in the "Lettres Persanes." In the eighteenth century cultivated people
+did little else but talk. Morning, noon and night, their epigrammatic
+tongues were busy. Conversation in historic salons became a fine
+art. There are no such literary coteries in our time. What with one
+excitement and another, the Parisian world chats but has no time for
+real conversation. Perhaps for _Gauloiseries_, true Gallic salt, we must
+now go to the unlettered, the sons of the soil, whose ancestors were
+boors when wit sparkled among their social superiors.
+
+Here are one or two types illustrating both characteristics, excellent
+types in their way of the small peasant proprietor hereabouts, a class
+having no counterpart or approximation to a counterpart in England.
+
+The first visit I describe was paid one evening to an old gardener whom
+I will call the Pere A--. Bent partly with toil, partly with age,
+you would have at once supposed that his working days were well over,
+especially on learning his circumstances, for sole owner he was of the
+little domain to which he had now retired for the day. Of benevolent
+aspect, shrewd, every inch alive despite infirmities, he received his
+neighbour and her English guest with rustic but cordial urbanity, at
+once entering into conversation. With evident pride and pleasure he
+watched my glances at premises and garden, house and outbuildings
+ramshackle enough, even poverty-stricken to look at, here not an
+indication of comfortable circumstances much less of independent means;
+the bit of land half farm, half garden, however, was fairly well kept
+and of course productive.
+
+"Yes, this dwelling is mine and the two hectares (four acres four
+hundred and odd feet), aye," he added self-complacently, "and I have a
+little money besides."
+
+"Yet you live here all by yourself and still work for wages?" I asked.
+His reply was eminently characteristic. "I work for my children." These
+children he told me were two grown up sons, one of them being like
+himself a gardener, both having work. Thus in order to hoard up a little
+more for two able-bodied young men, here was a bent, aged man living
+penuriously and alone, his only companion being a beautiful and
+evidently much petted donkey. I ventured to express an English view
+of the matter, namely, the undesirability of encouraging idleness and
+self-indulgence in one's children by toiling and moiling for them in old
+age.
+
+He nodded his head.
+
+"You are right, all that you say is true, but so it is with me. I must
+work for my children."
+
+And thus blindly are brought about the parricidal tragedies that Zola,
+Guy de Maupassant and other novelists have utilized in fiction, and
+with which we are familiarized in French criminal reports--parents and
+grandparents got rid of for the sake of their coveted hoardings.
+
+Thus also are generated in the rich and leisured classes that intense
+selfishness of the rising generation so movingly portrayed in M.
+Hervieu's play, "La Course du Flambeau." No one who has witnessed Mme.
+Rejane's presentment of the adoring, disillusioned mother can ever
+forget it.
+
+On leaving, the Pere A---- presented us with grapes and pears, carefully
+selecting the finest for his English visitor.
+
+At the gate I threw a Parthian dart.
+
+"Don't work too hard," I said, whereupon came the burden of his song:
+
+"One must work for one's children."
+
+This good neighbour could neither read nor write, a quite exceptional
+case in these days. Our second visit was made to a person similarly
+situated, but belonging to a different order.
+
+Madame B----, a widow, was also advanced in years and also lived by
+herself on her little property, consisting of walled-in cottage and
+outhouses, with straggling garden or rather orchard, garden and field in
+one.
+
+This good woman is what country folks in these parts call rich. I have
+no doubt that an English farmeress in her circumstances would have the
+neatest little parlour, a tidy maid to wait upon her, and most likely
+take afternoon tea in a black silk gown. Our hostess here wore the dress
+of a poor but respectable working woman. Her interior was almost as bare
+and primitive as that of the Boer farmhouse in the Paris Exhibition.
+Although between six and seven o'clock, there was no sign whatever of
+preparation for an evening meal. Indeed on every side things looked
+poverty-stricken. Not a penny had evidently been spent upon kitchen or
+bedrooms for years and years, the brick floor of both being bare, the
+furniture having done duty for generations.
+
+This "rentiere," or person living upon independent means, did not match
+her sordid surroundings. Although toil-worn, tanned and wrinkled, her
+face "brown as the ribbed sea-sand," there was a certain refinement
+about look, speech and manner, distinguishing her from the good man her
+neighbour. After a little conversation I soon found out that she had
+literary tastes.
+
+"Living alone and finding the winter evenings long I hire books from a
+lending library at Fontainebleau," she said.
+
+I opened my eyes in amazement. Seldom indeed had I heard of a peasant
+proprietor in France caring for books, much less spending money upon
+them.
+
+"And what do you read?" I asked.
+
+"Anything I can get," was the reply. "Madame's husband," here she looked
+at my friend, "has kindly lent me several."
+
+Among these I afterwards found had been Zola's "Rome" and "Le Desastre"
+by the brothers Margueritte.
+
+Like the Pere A---- she had married children and entertained precisely
+the same notion of parental duty. The few sous spent upon such
+beguilement of long winter nights were most likely economized by some
+little deprivation. There is something extremely pathetic in this
+patriarchal spirit, this uncompromising, ineradicable resolve to hand
+down a little patrimony not only intact but enlarged.
+
+"Our peasants live too sordidly," observed a Frenchman to me a day or
+two later. "They carry thrift to the pitch of avarice and vice. Zola's
+'La Terre' is not without foundation on fact."
+
+And excellent as is the principle of forethought, invaluable as is
+the habit of laying by for a rainy day, I have at last come to the
+conclusion that of the two national weaknesses, French avarice
+and English lavishness and love of spending, the latter is more in
+accordance with progress and the spirit of the age.
+
+In another part of the village we called upon a hale old body of
+seventy-seven, who not only lived alone and did everything for herself
+indoors but the entire work of a market garden, every inch of the two
+and a half acres being, of course, her own. Piled against an inner
+wall we saw a dozen or so faggots each weighing, we were told, half a
+hundredweight. Will it be believed that this old woman had picked up
+and carried from the forest on her back every one of these faggots? The
+poor, or rather those who will, are allowed to glean firewood in all the
+State forests of France. Let no tourist bestow a few sous upon aged men
+and women bearing home such treasure-trove! Quite possibly the dole may
+affront some owner of houses and lands.
+
+As we inspected her garden, walls covered with fine grapes, tomatoes and
+melons, of splendid quality, to say nothing of vegetables in profusion,
+it seemed all the more difficult to reconcile facts so incongruous. Here
+was a market gardener on her own account, mistress of all she surveyed,
+glad as a gipsy to pick up sticks for winter use. But the burden of her
+story was the same:
+
+"Il faut travailler pour ses enfants" (one must work for one's
+children), she said.
+
+All these little farm-houses are so many homely fortresses, cottage and
+outhouses being securely walled in, a precaution necessary with aged,
+moneyed folks living absolutely alone.
+
+A fourth visit was paid to a charming old Philemon and Baucis, the best
+possible specimens of their class. The husband lay in bed, ill of an
+incurable malady, and spotlessly white were his tasselled nightcap,
+shirt and bedclothes. Very clean and neat too was the bedroom opening
+on to the little front yard, beneath each window of the one-storeyed
+dwelling being a brilliant border of asters. The housewife also was a
+picture of tidiness, her cotton gown carefully patched and scrupulously
+clean. This worthy couple are said to be worth fifty thousand francs.
+The wife, a sexagenarian, does all the work of the house besides
+waiting on her good man, to whom she is devoted, but a married son
+and daughter-in-law share her duties at night. Here was no touch of
+sordidness or suggestion of "La Terre," instead a delightful picture of
+rustic dignity and ease. The housewife sold us half a bushel of pears,
+these two like their neighbours living by the produce of their small
+farm and garden.
+
+I often dropped in upon Madame B---- to whom even morning calls were
+acceptable.
+
+On the occasion of my farewell visit she had something pretty to
+say about one of my own novels, a French translation of which I had
+presented her.
+
+"I suppose," I said, "that you have some books of your own?"
+
+"Here they are," she said, depositing an armful on the table. "But I
+have never read much, and mostly _bibelots_" (trifles.)
+
+Her poor little library consisted of _bibelots_ indeed, a history of
+Jeanne d'Arc for children, and half a dozen other works, mostly school
+prizes of the kind awarded before school prizes in France were worth the
+paper on which they were printed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+LARCHANT.
+
+There is a certain stimulating quality of elasticity and crispness in
+the French atmosphere which our own does not possess. France, moreover,
+with its seven climates--for the description of these, see Reclus'
+Geography--does undoubtedly offer longer, less broken, spells of hot
+summer weather than the United Kingdom. But let me for once and for all
+dispel a widespread illusion. The late Lord Lytton, when Ambassador
+in Paris, used to say that in the French capital you could procure any
+climate you pleased. And experience proves that without budging an inch
+you may in France get as many and as rapid climatic changes as anywhere
+else under the sun. At noon in mid-May last I was breakfasting with
+friends on the Champs Elysees, when my hostess put a match to the fire
+and my host jumped up and lighted six wax candles. So dense had become
+the heavens that we could no longer see to handle knives and forks!
+Hail, wind, darkness and temperature recalled a November squall at home.
+Yet the day before I had enjoyed perfect summer weather in the Jardin
+d'Acclimitation. Invariableness is no more an attribute of the French
+climate than our own. Wherever we go we must take a change of dress, for
+all the world as if we were bound for the other side of the Tweed.
+
+My first Sunday at Bourron, on this third visit, was of perfect
+stillness, unclouded brilliance and southern languor, heralding, so we
+fondly imagined, the very morrow for an excursion.
+
+In the night a strong wind rose up, but as we had ordered a carriage for
+Larchant, and as carriages in these parts are not always to be had,
+as, moreover, grown folks no more than children like to defer their
+pleasure, off we set, two of the party on cycles forming a body guard.
+There seemed no likelihood of rain and in the forest we should not feel
+the wind.
+
+For the first mile or two all went well. Far ahead of us our cyclists
+bowled gaily along in the forest avenues, all of us being sheltered from
+the wind. It was not till we skirted a wide opening that we felt the
+full force of the tornado, soon overtaking our blowzed, dishevelled
+companions, both on foot and looking miserable enough.
+
+We re-entered the forest, and a little later, emerging from the fragrant
+depths of a pine wood, got our first view of Larchant, coming suddenly
+upon what looks like a cathedral towering above the plain, at its base
+a clustering village, whitewashed brown-roofed houses amid vineyards and
+orchards.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A grandiose view it is, recalling the minaret of Mansourah near Tclemcen
+in Algeria, that gigantic monolith apparently carved out of Indian gold
+and cleft in two like a pomegranate.
+
+Slowly we wound up towards the village, the wind, or rather hurricane,
+gathering in force as we went. It was indeed no easy task to get a
+nearer view of the church; more than once we were compelled to beat
+a retreat, whilst it seemed really unsafe to linger underneath such a
+ruin.
+
+Imagine the tower of St. Jacques in the Rue de Rivoli split in two,
+the upright half standing in a bare wind-swept level, and you have
+some faint notion of Larchant. On nearer approach such an impression of
+grandeur is by no means diminished. This magnificent parish church,
+in part a ruin, in part restored, rather grows upon one upon closer
+inspection. Reparation, for want of funds, has stopped short at the
+absolutely necessary. The body of the church has been so far restored as
+to be fit for use, but its crowning glory, the tower, remains a torso.
+
+The front view suggests no such dilapidation. How long will the shell
+of that lofty twelfth century tower remain standing? To my mind it hangs
+over the low, one-storeyed houses at its feet, a veritable sword of
+Damocles, sooner or later sure to fall with crushing force. The porch
+shows much beautiful carving, unfortunately defaced, and the interior
+some perfect specimens of pure Gothic arches, the whole whitewashed and
+bare as a barn.
+
+Larchant in the middle ages was a famous pilgrimage, and in the days of
+Charles IX. a halting stage on the road to Italy. It does not seem to
+attract many English pilgrims at the present time. Anyhow tea-making
+here seems a wholly unknown art. In a fairly clean inn, however, a
+good-natured landlady allowed us to make ourselves at home alike
+in kitchen and pantry. One of our party unearthed a time-honoured
+tea-pot--we had of course taken the precaution of carrying tea with
+us--one by one milk and sugar were forthcoming in what may be called
+wholesale fashion, milk-jugs and sugar-basins being apparently articles
+of superfluity, and in company of a charming old dog and irresistible
+kitten, also of some quiet wayfarers, we five-o'clocked merrily enough.
+
+Our business at Larchant was not wholly archaeological. Buffeted as we
+were by the hurricane, we managed to pay a visit in search of eggs and
+poultry for the table at home.
+
+If peasant and farming life in France certainly from time to time
+reminds us of Zola's "La Terre," we are also reminded of an aspect which
+the great novelist ignores. As will be seen from the following sketch
+sordidness and aspiration oft times, I am almost tempted to say, and
+most often, go hand in hand.
+
+We see one generation addicted to an existence so laborious and material
+as to have no counterpart in England; under the same roof growing up
+another, sharing all the advantages of social and intellectual progress.
+
+Not far from the church we called upon a family of large and wealthy
+farmers, owners of the soil they cultivate, millionaires by comparison
+with our neighbours at Bourron.
+
+We arrived in the midst of a busy time, a steam corn thresher plying in
+the vast farm-yard. The interior of the big, straggling farm-house we
+did not see, but two aged women dressed like poor peasants received
+us in the kitchen, a dingy, unswept, uninviting place, as are most
+farm-house kitchens in France. These old ladies were respectively
+mother-in-law and aunt of the farmer, whose wife, the real mistress of
+the house, soon came in. This tall, stout, florid, brawny-armed woman
+was evidently what French folks call _une maitresse femme_, a first-rate
+housewife and manager; a somewhat awe-inspiring person she looked as she
+stood before us, arms akimbo, her short coarse serge skirt showing shoes
+well acquainted with stable and neat-house, one dirty blue cotton apron
+worn over another equally dirty. Now, my hostess, as I have said, wanted
+to purchase some poultry for the table, and here comes in the moral
+of my story. Vainly the lady begged and begged again for a couple of
+chickens. "But we want them for our Parisians," the three farming women
+reiterated, one echoing the other. "Our Parisians, our Parisians,"
+the words were repeated a dozen times. And as was explained to me
+afterwards, "our Parisians," for whom the pick of the poultry yard
+was being reserved, were the two sons of the rather forbidding-looking
+matron before us, young gentlemen being educated in a Paris Lycee, and
+both of them destined for the learned professions!
+
+This side of rural life, this ambition, akin to what we see taking
+quite another form among ourselves, Zola does not sufficiently realize.
+Shocking indeed were the miserliness and materialism of such existences
+but for the element of self-denial, this looking ahead for those to
+follow after. How differently, for instance, the farm-house and its
+group must have appeared, but for the evident pride and hopes centred in
+_nos Parisiens_, who knows?--perhaps youths destined to attain the first
+rank in official or political callings!
+
+The farther door of the smoke-dried kitchen opened on to the farm-yard,
+around which were stables and neat-houses. In the latter the mistress
+of the house proudly drew our attention to a beautiful blue cow, grey
+in our ignorance we had called it, one of a score or more of superb kine
+all now reclining on their haunches before being turned out to pasture.
+In front, cocks and hens disported themselves on a dunghill, whilst
+beyond, the steam corn thresher was at work, every hand being called
+into requisition. No need here for particulars and figures. The
+superabundant wealth, so carefully husbanded for the two youths in
+Paris, was self-evident.
+
+The tornado, with threatening showers and the sight of a huge tree just
+uprooted by the road side, necessitated the shortest possible cut home.
+In fair weather a prolongation of our drive would have given us a sight
+of some famous rocks of this rocky forest. But we carried home memories
+enough for one day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+RECLOSES.
+
+This ancient village, reached by the forest, is one of the most
+picturesque of the many picturesque places hereabouts. Quitting a
+stretch of pinewood we traverse flat cultivated land, gradually winding
+up towards a long straggling village surmounted by a lofty church tower
+of grey stone. On either side of this street are enclosed farm-houses,
+the interiors being as pictorial as can be imagined. Untidy as are most
+French homesteads, for peasant farmers pay little court to the Graces,
+there is always a bit of flower garden. Sometimes this flower garden
+is aerial, a bower of roses on the roof sometimes amid the incongruous
+surroundings of pig styes or manure heaps. This region is a petunia
+land; wherever we go we find a veritable blaze of petunia blossoms, pale
+mauve, deepest rose, purple and white massed together without order or
+view to effect. In one of the little fortresses--for so these antique
+farmhouses may be called--we saw a rustic piazza, pillars and roof of
+rude unhewn stone blazing with petunias, no attempt whatever at making
+the structure whole, symmetrical or graceful to the eye. It seems as if
+these homely though rich farmers, or rather farmers' wives, could not do
+without flowers, above the street jutting many aerial gardens, the only
+touch of beauty in the work-a-day picture. These interiors would supply
+artists with the most captivating subjects. The women, their skins brown
+and wrinkled as ripe, shelled walnuts, their head-dress a blue and white
+kerchief neatly folded and knotted, the expression of their faces shrewd
+and kindly, all contribute to the charm of the scene.
+
+Here as elsewhere the young women and girls affect a little fashion and
+finery on Sundays.
+
+We should not know unless we were told that Recloses was one of the
+richest villages in these parts. On this Sunday, September 1st, 1901, in
+one place a steam thresher was at work, although for the most part
+folks seemed to be taking their ease in their holiday garb. Perhaps the
+difficulty of procuring the machine accounted for the fact of seeing it
+on a Sunday.
+
+One of the farm-yards showed a charming menagerie of poultry and the
+prettiest rabbits in the world, all disporting themselves in most
+amicable fashion. Here, as elsewhere, when we stopped to admire, the
+housewife came out, pleased to interchange a few words with us. The
+sight of Recloses is not, however, its long line of little walled-in
+farm-houses, but the curious rocky platform at the end of the village,
+perforated with holes always full of water, and the stupendous view
+thence obtained--an ocean of sombre green unrelieved by a single sail.
+
+Already the vast panorama of forest shows signs of autumn, light touches
+of yellow relieving the depths of solemn green. On such a day of varied
+cloudland the perspective must be quite different, and perhaps even more
+beautiful than under a burning cloudless sky, no soft gradations between
+the greens and the blues. The little pools or perforations breaking
+the surface of the broad platform, acres of rocks, are, I believe,
+unexplained phenomena. In the driest season these openings contain
+water, presumably forced upwards from hidden springs. The pools, just
+now covered with green slime, curiously spot the grey surface of the
+rocks.
+
+If, leaving the world of forest to our right, we continue our journey
+in the direction of Chapelle la Reine, we overlook a vast plain the
+population of which is very different from that of the smiling fertile
+prosperous valley of the Loing. This plain, extending to Etampes and
+Pithiviers, might, I am told, possibly have suggested to Zola some
+scenes and characters of "La Terre." A French friend of mine, well
+acquainted with these parts, tells me that at any rate there, if
+anywhere, the great novelist might have found suggestions for such a
+work. The soil is arid, the cultivation is primitive in the extreme and
+the people are rough and uncouth. The other day an English resident at
+Marlotte, when cycling among these villages of the plain inquired his
+way of a countryman.
+
+"You are not a Frenchman?" quoth the latter before giving the desired
+information.
+
+"No I am not" was the reply.
+
+"You are not an American?"
+
+"No, I am an Englishman."
+
+"Ah!" was the answer, "I smelt you out sure enough" (_Je vous ai bien
+senti_). Whereupon he proceeded to put the wayfarer on his right road.
+
+As a rule French peasants are exceedingly courteous to strangers, but
+these good people of the plain seldom come in contact with the tourist
+world, their country not being sufficiently picturesque even to attract
+the cyclist.
+
+The curious thirteenth-century church of Recloses had long been an art
+pilgrimage. It contains, or at least should contain, some of the most
+wonderful wood carvings in France; figures and groups of figures
+highly realistic in the best sense of the word. These sculptures,
+unfortunately, we were not able to inspect a second time; exhibited in
+the Paris Exhibition they had not yet been replaced.
+
+It is a beautiful drive from Recloses to Bourron by the Croix de Saint
+Herem. A little way out of the village we came upon a pretty scene,
+people, in family groups, playing croquet under the trees. Dancing also
+goes on in summer as in the olden time. It was curious as we drove along
+to note the behaviour of my friend's dog: it never for a moment closed
+its eyes, and yet there was nothing to look at but avenue after avenue
+of trees. What could the little animal find so fascinating in the
+somewhat monotonous sight? A friend at home assures me that a pet of her
+own enjoyed drives from purely snobbish motives; his great gratification
+arising from the sense of superiority over fellow dogs compelled to
+trudge on foot. But in these woodland solitudes there was no room for
+such a sentiment, not a dog being visible, only now and then a cyclist
+flashing by.
+
+There is no more splendid cycling ground in the world than this forest
+of Fontainebleau.
+
+Shakespeare says:--
+
+ "This guest of summer,
+ The temple-haunting martlet, does approve
+ By his loved mansionry that the heaven's breath
+ Smells wooingly here: no jutty frieze, buttress,
+ Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made
+ His pendent bed, and procreant cradle: Where they
+ Most breed and haunt, I have observed the air
+ Is delicate."
+
+About this time at Bourron the village street was alive with swallows
+preparing, I presume, for departure southwards. A beautiful sight it
+was to see these winged congregations evidently concerting their future
+movements.
+
+Another feature to be mentioned is the number of large handsome moths
+frequenting these regions. One beautiful creature as large as a swallow
+used to fly into our dining room every evening for warmth; fastening
+itself to the wall it would there remain undisturbed until the morning.
+
+I finish these reminiscences of Bourron by the following citation from
+Balzac's "Ursule Mirouet":--
+
+
+"On entering Nemours at five o'clock in the morning, Ursule woke up
+feeling quite ashamed of her untidiness, and of encountering Savinien's
+look of admiration. During the time that the diligence took to come
+from Bouron (_sic_), where it stopped a few minutes, the young man had
+observed Ursule. He had noted the candour of her mind, the beauty of her
+person, the whiteness of her complexion, the delicacy of her features,
+the charm of the voice which had uttered the short and expressive
+sentence, in which the poor child said everything, while wishing to say
+nothing. In short I do not know what presentiment made him see in Ursule
+the woman whom the doctor had depicted, framed in gold, with these magic
+words:--'Seven to eight hundred thousand francs!'"
+
+Holiday tourists in these parts cannot do better than put this
+love-story in their pockets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+NEMOURS.
+
+"Who knows Nemours," wrote Balzac, "knows that nature there is as
+beautiful as art," and again he dwells upon the charm of the sleepy
+little town memorialized in "Ursule Mirouet."
+
+The delicious valley of Loing indeed fascinated Balzac almost as much as
+his beloved Touraine.
+
+As his recently published letters to Madame Hanska have shown us,
+several of his greatest novels were written in this neighbourhood,
+whilst in the one named above we have a setting as striking as that of
+"Eugenie Grandet" or "Beatrix." A ten minutes' railway journey brings
+us to Nemours, one of the few French towns, by the way, in which Arthur
+Young lost his temper. Here is his own account of the incident:--
+
+"Sleep at Nemours, where we met with an innkeeper who exceeded in
+knavery all we had met with, either in France or Italy: for supper,
+we had a _soupe maigre_, a partridge and a chicken roasted, a plate of
+celery, a small cauliflower, two bottles of poor _vin du Pays_, and a
+dessert of two biscuits and four apples: here is the bill:--Potage
+1 liv. 10f.--Perdrix 2 liv. 10f.--Poulet 2 liv.--Celeri 1 liv.
+4f.--Choufleur 2 liv.--Pain et dessert 2 liv.--Feu et appartement 6
+liv.--Total 19 liv. 8f. Against so impudent an extortion we remonstrated
+severely but in vain. We then insisted on his signing the bill, which,
+after many evasions, he did, _a l'etoile, Foulliare_. But having
+been carried to the inn, not as the star, but the _ecu de France_, we
+suspected some deceit: and going out to examine the premises, we found
+the sign to be really the _ecu_, and learned on enquiry that his own
+name was Roux, instead of _Foulliare_: he was not prepared for this
+detection, or for the execration we poured on such infamous conduct; but
+he ran away in an instant and hid himself till we were gone. In justice
+to the world, however, such a fellow ought to be marked out."
+
+I confess I do not myself find such charges excessive. From a very
+different motive, Nemours put me as much out of temper as it had done
+my great predecessor a hundred years before. Will it be believed that a
+town memorialized by the great, perhaps _the_ greatest, French novelist,
+could not produce its title of honour, in other words a copy of "Ursule
+Mirouet"?
+
+This town of 4,000 and odd souls and chef-lieu of department does not
+possess a bookseller's shop. We did indeed see in a stationer's window
+one or two penny books, among these an abridged translation of "Uncle
+Tom's Cabin." But a friendly wine merchant, who seemed to take my
+reproaches very much to heart, assured us that in the municipal library
+all Balzac's works were to be found, besides many valuable books dealing
+with local history.
+
+Cold comfort this for tourists who want to buy a copy of the Nemours
+story! As we stroll about the grass-grown streets, we feel that
+railways, telephones and the rest have very little changed Nemours since
+Balzac's descriptions, written three-quarters of a century ago.
+
+The sweet and pastoral surroundings of the place are in strong contrast
+with the sordid next-of-kin peopling the pages of his romance. Beyond
+the fine old church of rich grey stone, you obtain as enchanting a
+view as the valley of the Loing can show, a broad, crystal-clear river
+winding amid picturesque architecture, richest and most varied foliage,
+ash and weeping willow mingling with deeper-hued beech and alder. It is
+difficult, almost impossible, to describe the charm of this riverside
+scenery. In one passage of his novel, Balzac compares the view to the
+scenery of an opera, and in very truth every feature forms a whole so
+harmonious as to suggest artistic arrangement.
+
+Nature and accident have effected the happiest possible combination
+of wood, water and building stone. Nothing is here to mar the complete
+picture. Grandly the cathedral-like church and fine old chateau stand
+out to-day against the brilliant sky, soft grey stone and dark brown
+making subdued harmonies. Formerly Nemours was surrounded by woods,
+hence its name. People are said to attain here a very great age, life
+being tranquil and the nature of the people somewhat lethargic.
+
+Amongst the more energetic inhabitants are a lady dentist and her
+sister, who between them do a first rate business.
+
+French peasants never dream of indulging in false teeth; such an idea
+would never enter the head of even the richest. But an aching tooth
+interferes with the labours of the farm, and must be got rid of at
+any cost. This young lady _chirurgien et dentiste_, such is the name
+figuring on her door plate, is not only most expert in using the
+forceps, but is attractive and pretty.
+
+Her charges are two francs for a visit or operation; in partnership
+with her is a sister who does the accounts, and as nuns and sisters
+of charity unprovided with certificates are no longer allowed to draw
+teeth, act as midwives and cut off limbs, country doctors and dentists
+of either sex have now a fair chance.
+
+No town in this part of France suffered more during the German invasion.
+The municipal authorities had at first decided upon making a bold stand,
+thus endeavouring to check the enemy's advance on Paris. Differences
+of opinion arose, prudential counsels prevailed, and it was through a
+mistaken order that a Prussian detachment was attacked near the town.
+The consequences were appalling. The station was burned to the ground,
+enormous contributions in money and material were exacted from the town,
+some of the authorities were made to travel on the railways with
+the invaders, and others were carried off to remote fortresses of
+Brandenburg and there kept as prisoners for nine months.
+
+The account of all these incidents, written by a victim, may be
+consulted in a volume of the town library.
+
+If people frequently attain the age of a hundred in Nemours, as I was
+assured, it is rather due to placid temperament than to intellectual
+torpor. The town possesses learned societies, and a member of its
+archaeological association has published a book of great local interest
+and value, viz:--"Nemours, Temps Geologiques, Temps Prehistoriques,
+Temps Historiques, par E. Doigneau, Membre de la Societe Archeologique
+de Seine-et-Marne, Ancien Vice President de la section de Fontainebleau,
+Paris."
+
+Strange to say, although this neighbourhood has offered a rich field for
+prehistoric research, Nemours as yet possesses no museum, I do verily
+believe the first French town of any size I have ever found in France
+without one at least in embryo. For the cyclist the run from Bourron
+to Nemours is delightful, on the hottest day in the year spinning along
+broad well-wooded roads, with lovely perspectives from time to time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+LA CHARITE-SUR-LOIRE.
+
+From Bourron, in September, 1900, I journeyed with a friend to La
+Charite, a little town four hours off.
+
+It is ever with feelings of pleasurable anticipation that I approach
+any French town for the first time. The number of these, alas! now being
+few, I have of late years been compelled to restrain curiosity, leaving
+one or two dreamed-of spots for the future, saying with Wordsworth:--
+
+ "Should life be dull and spirits low,
+ 'Twill soothe us in our sorrow,
+ That earth has something yet to show,
+ The bonny holms of Yarrow."
+
+La Charite, picturesque of the picturesque--according to French
+accounts, English, we have none--for many years had been a Yarrow to me,
+a reserve of delight, held back from sheer Epicureanism.
+
+As, on the 12th of September, the cumbersome old omnibus rattled over
+the unpaved streets, both to myself and fellow traveller came a feeling
+of disenchantment. We had apparently reached one more of those sleepy
+little _chefs-lieux_ familiar to both, places of interest certainly, the
+sleepiest having some architectural gem or artistic treasure. But here
+was surely no Yarrow!
+
+A few minutes later we discovered our error. Hardly had we reached our
+rooms in the more than old-fashioned Hotel du Grand Monarque, than from
+a side window, we caught sight of the Loire; so near, indeed, lay the
+bright, blue river, that we could almost have thrown pebbles into its
+clear depths; quitting the hotel, half a dozen steps, no more were
+needed, an enchanting scene burst upon the view.
+
+Most beautiful is the site of La Charite, built terrace-wise, not on the
+skirts but on the very hem of the Loire, here no revolutionary torrent,
+sweeping away whole villages, leaving only church steeples visible above
+the engulfing waters, as I had once seen it at Nantes, but a broad,
+smooth, crystal expanse of sky-blue. Over against the handsome stone
+bridge to-day having its double in the limpid water, we see a little
+islanded hamlet crowned with picturesque church tower; and, placing
+ourselves midway between the town and its suburban twin, obtain vast and
+lovely perspectives. Westward, gradually purpling as evening wears on,
+rises the magnificent height of Sancerre, below, amid low banks bordered
+with poplar, flowing the Loire. Eastward, looking towards Nevers, our
+eyes rest on the same broad sheet of blue; before us, straight as
+an arrow, stretches the French road of a pattern we know so well, an
+apparently interminable avenue of plane or poplar trees. The river is
+low at this season, and the velvety brown sands recall the sea-shore
+when the tide is out. Exquisite, at such an hour are the reflections,
+every object having its mirrored self in the transparent waves, the
+lights and shadows of twilight making lovely effects.
+
+As is the case with Venice, La Charite should be reached by river, and a
+pity it seems that little steamers do not ply between all the principal
+towns on the Loire. How enchanting, like the immortal Vert-Vert, of
+Gresset's poem, to travel from Nevers to the river's mouth!
+
+If I had headed this paper merely with the words "La Charite," I should
+surely be supposed to treat of some charitable institution in France,
+or of charity as worked out in the abstract, for this first of Christian
+virtues has given the place its name, presumably perpetuating the
+charitableness of its abbatial founders. Just upon two thousand years
+ago, some pious monks of the order of Cluny settled here, calling their
+foundation La Charite. Gradually a town grew around the abbey walls, and
+what better name for any than this? So La Charite it was in early feudal
+times, and La Charite it remains in our own.
+
+The place itself is as antiquated and behindhand as any I have seen in
+France, which is saying a good deal. A French gentleman, native of
+these parts, told me that in his grandfather's time our Hotel du Grand
+Monarque enjoyed a fine reputation. In many respects it deserves the
+same still, excellent beds, good cooking, quietude and low prices not
+being so common as they might be in French provincial inns. The house,
+too, is curious, what with its spiral stone staircases, little passages
+leading to one room here, to another there--as if in former days
+travellers objected to walls that adjoined those of other people--and
+unaccountable levels, it is impossible to understand whether you were
+on the first floor or the second floor, house-top, or basement. Our
+bedrooms, for instance, reached by one of the spiral stone staircases
+just named never used by myself without apprehension, landed us on the
+edge of a poultry yard; I suppose a wide bit of roof had been converted
+into this use, but it was quite impossible to make out any architectural
+plan. These rooms adjoining this _basse-cour_, hens and chicks
+would enter unceremoniously and pick up the crumbs we threw to them.
+Fastidious tourists might resent so primitive a state of things, the
+hotel, I should say, remaining exactly what it was under the Ancien
+Regime. The beauty and interest of various kinds around, more than make
+up for small drawbacks. Here the archaeologist will not grudge several
+days. Ruined as it is, the ancient abbey may be reconstructed in the
+mind's eye by the help of what we see before us. The fragments of
+crumbling wall, the noble tower and portal, the delicately sculptured
+pillars, cornices, and arches, enable us to build up the whole, just
+as Cuvier made out an entire skeleton from the examination of a single
+bone. These grand architectural fragments have not been neglected by the
+learned. Unfortunately, and exceptionally, La Charite possesses neither
+public library nor museum, but at Nevers the traveller would surely find
+a copy of Prosper Merimee's "Notes Archeologiques" in which is a minute
+account of these.
+
+Alike without and within the ruins show a medley of styles and richest
+ornamentation.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The superb north-west tower, that forms so striking an object from the
+river, is said to be in the Burgundian style; rather should we put it
+after a Burgundian style, so varied and heterogeneous are the churches
+coming under this category. Again, the guide books inform us that
+the open space between this tower and the church was occupied by the
+narthex, a vast outer portico of ancient Burgundian churches used for
+the reception of penitents, catechumens, and strangers. All interested
+in ecclesiastical architecture should visit the abbey church of Vezelay,
+which possesses a magnificent narthex of two storeys, restored by the
+late Viollet le Duc. Vezelay, by the way, may be easily reached from La
+Charite.
+
+Next to the elaborate sculptures of this grand tower, will be noted the
+superb colour of the building stone, carved out of deep-hued gold it
+looks under the burning blue sky. And of a piece are arch, portico and
+column, one and all helping us to reconstruct the once mighty abbey,
+home of a brotherhood so powerful as to necessitate disciplinary
+measures on the part of the Pope.
+
+The interior of the church shows the same elaborateness of detail, and
+the same mixture of styles, the Romanesque-Burgundian predominating, so,
+at least, affirm authorities.
+
+The idler and lover of the picturesque will not find time hang heavy on
+his hands here. Very sweet are the riverside views, no matter on which
+side we obtain them, and the quaintest little staircases of streets run
+from base to summit of the pyramidally-built town. A climb of a quarter
+of an hour takes us to an admirable coign of vantage just above the
+abbey church, and commanding a view of Sancerre and the river. That
+little town, so splendidly placed, is celebrated for its eight months'
+defence as a Huguenot stronghold.
+
+La Charite, with most mediaeval towns, was fortified, one old city gate
+still remaining.
+
+To-day, as when that charming writer, Emile Montegut visited the
+place more than a generation ago, the townspeople ply their crafts and
+domestic callings abroad. In fine weather, no work that can possibly be
+done in the open air is done within four walls. Another curious feature
+of these engaging old streets, is the number of blacksmiths' shops. It
+would seem as if all the horses, mules, and donkeys of the Nievre were
+brought hither to be shod, the smithy fires keeping up a perpetual
+illumination.
+
+A third and still more noteworthy point is the infrequency--absence, I
+am inclined to say--of cabarets. Soberest of the sober, orderliest of
+the orderly, appear these good folks of La Charite, les Caritates as
+they are called, nor, apparently, has tradition demoralised them. One
+might expect that a town dedicated to the virtue of almsgiving would
+abound in beggars. Not one did we see.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+POUGUES.
+
+If an ugly name could kill a place, Pougues must surely have been ruined
+as a health resort centuries ago. Coming, too, after that soothing,
+harmoniously named La Charite, could any configuration of letters grate
+more harshly on the ear? Truth to tell, my travelling companion and
+myself had a friendly little altercation about Pougues. It seemed
+impossible to believe pleasant things of a town so labelled. But the
+reputation of Pougues dates from Hercules and Julius Caesar, both
+heroes, it is said, having had recourse to its mineral springs! Coming
+from legend to history, we find that Pougues, or, at least, the waters
+of Pougues, were patronised by the least objectionable son of Catherine
+de Medicis, Henri II. of France and runaway King of Poland. Imputing
+his disorders to sorcery, he was thus reassured by a sensible physician
+named Pidoux: "Sire, the malady from which you suffer is due to no
+witchcraft. Lead a quiet life for ten weeks, and drink the water of
+Pougues." The best king France ever had, namely, the gay Gascon, and
+after him Louis XIII., by no means one of the worst, had recourse to
+Pougues waters; also that arch-voluptuary and arch-despot, the Sun-King,
+who imagined that even syntax and prosody must bow to his will.
+[Footnote: One day the young king ordered his carriage, saying, "_mon_
+carrosse," instead of "_ma_ carrosse," the French word being derived
+from the Italian feminine, _carrozza_. On being gently corrected, the
+king flew into a passion, declaring that masculine he had called it, and
+masculine it should remain, which it has done to this day, so the story
+runs. Let the Republic look to it!] And Madame de Sevigne--for whom,
+however, I have scant love, for did she not hail the revocation of the
+Edict of Nantes?--Madame de Sevigne honoured Pougues with an epigram.
+
+A second Purgatory she styled the douches, and, doubtless, in those
+non-washing days, a second Purgatory it would have been to most folks.
+
+To Pougues, nevertheless, we went, and if these notes induce the more
+enterprising of my countrypeople to do the same next summer, they are
+not likely to repent of the experiment. Never, indeed, was a little
+Eden of coolness, freshness, and greenery more abominably used by its
+sponsors, whilst the name of so many French townlings are a poem in
+themselves!
+
+From a view of sky blue waters and smooth brown sands we were
+transported to a world of emerald green verdure and richest foliage,
+interpenetrated with golden light. On this 14th of September the warmth
+and dazzlingness of mid-summer still reigned at Pougues; and the scenery
+in which we suddenly found ourselves, bosquets, dells, and glades, with
+all the charm but without the savageness of the forest, recalled the
+loveliest lines of the laziest poet:--
+
+ "Was naught around but images of rest,
+ And flowery beds, that slumberous influence kest[1],
+ Sleep-soothing groves and quiet lawns between,
+ From poppies breathed; and beds of pleasant green."
+
+[Footnote 1: Cast]
+
+A drive of a few minutes had landed us in the heart of this little
+Paradise, baths and Casino standing in the midst of park-like grounds.
+Apparently Pougues, that is to say, the Pougues-les-Eaux of later
+days, has been cut out of natural woodland, the Casino gardens and
+its surroundings being rich in forest trees of superb growth and
+great variety. The wealth of foliage gives this new fashionable little
+watering-place an enticingly rural appearance, nor is the attraction
+of water wholly wanting. To quote once more a most quotable, if little
+read, poet:--
+
+ "Meantime, unnumbered glittering streamlets played,
+ And hurled everywhere their water's sheen,
+ That, as they bickered through the sunny glade,
+ Though restless still, themselves a lulling murmur made."
+
+A pretty little lake, animated with swans, varies the woodland scenery,
+and tropical birds in an aviary lend brilliant bits of colour. The
+usual accessories of a health resort are, of course, here--reading room,
+concert hall, theatre, and other attractions, rapidly turning the place
+into a lesser Vichy. The number and magnificence of the hotels, the
+villas and _cottages_, that have sprung up on every side, bespeak the
+popularity of Pougues-les-Eaux, as it is now styled, the surname adding
+more dignity than harmoniousness. One advantage Pougues possesses over
+its rivals, is position. At Aix-les-Bains, Plombieres, Salins, and how
+many other inland spas, you are literally wedged in between shelving
+hills. If you want to enjoy wide horizons, and anything like a breeze,
+you must get well outside the town. Never in hot, dusty, crowded
+cities have I felt so half-suffocated as at the two first named places.
+Pougues, on the contrary, lies in a broad expanse of beautifully varied
+woodland and champaign, no more appropriate site conceivable for the now
+popular air-cure. "Pougues-les-Eaux, Cure d'Eau and Cure d'Air," is
+now its proud title, folks flocking hither, not only to imbibe its
+delicious, ice-cold, sparkling waters, but to drink in its highly
+nourishing air. The iron-gaseous waters resemble in properties those of
+Spa and Vichy. From one to five tumblers are ordered a day, according
+to the condition of the drinker, a little stroll between each dose being
+advisable. With regard to the air-cure, visitors are reminded that at
+Pougues they find the four kinds of walking exercise recommended by a
+German specialist, namely, that on quite level ground; secondly, a
+very gradual climb; thirdly, a somewhat steeper bit of up-hill; and,
+fourthly, the really arduous ascent of Mont Givre. In order to entice
+health-seekers, all kinds of gratifications await them on the summit,
+restaurant, dairy, reading room, tennis court, and croquet ground, to
+say nothing of a panorama almost unrivalled in eastern France. We have,
+indeed, climbed the Eiffel Tower, in other words, are on a level with
+that final stage from which floats the Tricolour. Looking east we behold
+the sombre Morvan and Nevers rising above the Loire, whilst westward,
+beyond the plain and the Loire, may be descried the cathedral of
+Bourges. How many regions visited and revisited by myself now lie before
+my eyes as on a map--the Berri, Georges Sand's country, the little
+Celtic kingdom of the Morvan, on the borders of which, for so many
+years, that charming writer, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, made his home;
+the Nivernais, with its souvenirs of Vert-Vert and Mazarin, or, rather,
+Mazarin and Vert-Vert, the Department of the Allier made from the
+ancient province of the Bourbonnais.
+
+A wanderer in France should never be without his Arthur Young. That
+"wise and honest traveller," of course, had been before us, but
+travelling in a contrary direction. "From the hill that descends to
+Pougues," he wrote on his way from Nevers to Fontainebleau, in 1790,
+"is an extensive view to the north, and after Pouilly a (_sic_) fine
+scenery, with the Loire doubling through it." But the great farmer made
+this journey in mid-winter, thus missing its charm. And Arthur Young
+was ever too intent upon crops and roots to notice wild flowers. Had
+he traversed this region earlier in the year, he might have missed an
+exquisite feature, namely, the sweeps of autumn crocus. Just now the
+rich pastures around Pougues, as well as suburban lawns and wayside
+spaces, were tinted with delicate mauve, the ground being literally
+carpeted with these flowers. It was as if the lightest possible veil of
+pale purple covered the turf, the same profusion being visible on every
+side.
+
+One final word about this sweet and most unmusically named place. On no
+occasion and nowhere have I been received with more cordiality than
+at dear little Pougues, a place I was told there utterly ignored by my
+country people. I do honestly believe, indeed, that myself and fellow
+traveller were the first English folk to wander about those delicious
+gardens, and taste the incomparable waters, cool, sparkling,
+invigorating as those of Spa.
+
+One enterprising proprietor of an excellent hotel was so anxious to
+secure an English _clientele_, the best _clientele_ in the world, so
+hotel keepers aver, that she offered me a handsome percentage on any
+visitors I would send her. In the most delicate manner I could command,
+I gave her to understand that my inquiries about Pougues were not made
+from a business point of view, but that I should certainly proclaim its
+many attractions on the house-tops.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+NEVERS AND MOULINS.
+
+I found the well-remembered Hotel de France much as I had left it, just
+upon twenty years before, every whit as quiet, comfortable, and moderate
+in price, indeed, one of the best provincial hotels of France. The dear
+old woman then employed as waitress, had, of course, long since gone
+to her rest, and the landlord and landlady were new to me. But, the
+traditions of an excellent house were evidently kept up, accommodation,
+meanwhile, having been greatly enlarged.
+
+A place is like a book; if worth knowing at all, to be returned to again
+and again. After the first brief visit so many years ago, I wrote,
+"I envy the traveller who for the first time stands on the bridge of
+Nevers." And more imposing, more exhilarating still, seemed the
+view from the same spot now; under the brilliant sky, in the clear
+atmosphere, every feature standing out as in a mosaic proudly dominating
+all, the Cathedral, with its mass of sombre architecture; stretching
+wide to right and left, the gay, prosperous-looking city; white villas
+rising one above the other, hanging gardens and terraced lawns, making
+greenery and verdure in mid-air. On the occasion of my first visit in
+August, 1881, the Loire was so low as to appear a mere thread of palest
+blue amid white sands; at the time I now write of, broad and beautiful
+it flowed beneath the noble bridge, a deep twilight sky reflected in its
+limpid waters.
+
+How well I remember the first sight of this scene years ago! Then it was
+early morning of market day, and, pouring in from the country, I had
+met crowds of peasants with their products, the men in blue blouses, the
+women in neat white coiffes, some bearing huge baskets on their heads,
+others drawing heavily laden barrows, driving donkey-carts, the piled-up
+fruit and vegetables making a blaze of colour. For three sous I recorded
+the purchase of more wild strawberries, peaches, and greengages than I
+knew what to do with, each grower doing business on his own account, no
+middleman to share his profits; choicest fruit and vegetables to be had
+almost for the asking. On this lovely Sunday evening plenty of peasant
+folk were about, the men fishing in the Loire, the women minding their
+children under the trees. But I noted here, as elsewhere, a gradual
+disappearance of the blue blouse and white coiffe. Broadcloth and
+bonnets are fast superseding the homely, picturesque dress of former
+days.
+
+The aerial residences just mentioned are characteristic of riverside
+Nevers. Craning our necks as we strolled to and fro, we remarked how
+much life in such altitudes must resemble that of a balloon, folks
+being thus lifted above the hubbub, malodours, and microbes of the human
+bee-hive below. For my own part I prefer a turnpike level, despite the
+engaging aspect of those rose-girt verandahs, bowers, and lawns on a
+level with the cathedral tower.
+
+"Nevers makes a fine appearance, rising proudly from the Loire," wrote
+Arthur Young, "but on the first entrance it is like a thousand other
+places."
+
+But the indefatigable apostle of the turnip had no time for archaeology
+on his great tour, or he would have discovered that Nevers possesses
+more than one architectural gem of the first water. The cathedral
+certainly, alike without and within, must take rank after those of
+Chartres, Le Mans, Reims, and how many others! but the exquisite little
+church of St. Etienne and the Ducal Palace, are both perfect in their
+way, and will enchant all lovers of harmony and proportion. The first,
+another specimen of so-called Romanesque-Burgundian, has to be looked
+for, standing as it does in a kind of _cul de sac_; the second occupies
+a conspicuous site, forms, indeed, the centre-piece and crowning
+ornament of the town. Daintiest of the dainty, this fairy-like Italian
+palace in the heart of France, reminds us that once upon a time Nevers
+was the seat of Italian dukes, the last of whom was a nephew of Mazarin.
+The great Cardinal, "whose heart was more French than his speech," and
+who served France so well, despite his nationality and his nepotism,
+having purchased the Nivernais of a Gonzague, finally incorporated it
+into the French crown in 1659.
+
+To this day, Nevers remains true to its Italian traditions. Go into the
+tiniest suburban street, enter the poorest little general shop, and you
+are reminded of the art that made the city famous hundreds of years ago,
+an art introduced by a Duke of Mantua, relation of Catherine de Medicis.
+It was in the sixteenth century, that this feudal lord of the Nivernais
+summoned Italian potters hither, among these a native of Faenza.
+Under his direction a manufactory of faience was established, the ware
+resembling that of his native city, scriptural and allegorical subjects
+traced in manganese. The unrivalled blue glaze of Nevers is of later
+date. Just as Rouen potters were celebrated for their reds, the
+Nivernais surpassed them in blues. No French or foreign potters ever
+achieved an azure of equal depth and purity.
+
+The golden age of Nevers majolica belongs to that early period, but the
+highly ornamented faience now produced in its ateliers, shows taste and
+finish, and in the town itself may be found charming things as cheap as,
+if not cheaper than, our commonest earthenware.
+
+As I write, I have before me some purchases made at a small general
+dealer's, a plate, and two small amphora-shaped vases, costing a few
+sous each. The colouring of this cheap pottery is very harmonious, and
+the glaze remarkable for its brilliance. The shopwoman, with whom we
+had a pleasant chat, did not seem astonished at our admiration for her
+goods.
+
+"I sell lots of such things as you have just bought, to folks like
+you" _(de votre genre)_, she said, "strangers who like to carry away a
+souvenir of the place, and all my ware comes from the same manufacture."
+
+To-day Nevers thrives upon ornamental majolica. A hundred and ten years
+ago it throve upon plates and dishes commemorating the Revolution. In
+the upper storey of the Ducal Palace we may read revolutionary annals in
+faience, every event being memorialised by a piece of porcelain.
+
+Curious enough is this record in earthenware, one stormy day after
+another being thus commemorated; and perhaps more curious still is
+the evident care with which these fragile objects have been preserved.
+Throughout the Napoleonic era they might pass--had not gold pieces
+then on one side the portrait of "Napoleon Empereur," on the obverse
+"Republique Francais"?--but when Louis XVIII was brought back by his
+foreign friends, how was it that there came no general smashing, a great
+flinging of revolutionary potsherds to the dunghill? Safe enough now is
+the Nivernais collection, under the roof of the Ducal Palace, the
+rude designs and commonness of the ware strikingly contrasted with the
+exquisite things around.
+
+In close proximity to these cheap plates, dedicated to the Phrygian cap
+and sans-culottism, are the very choicest specimens of Nevers faience of
+priceless value. Why the municipality, as a rule so generous towards the
+public, should thus inconveniently house its treasure, is inconceivable.
+
+The museum is reached by a long spiral staircase, without banister or
+support, and a false step must certainly result in a broken leg, or,
+perhaps, neck! The room also contains a striking portrait of Theodore de
+Beze, the great French reformer, who, then an aged man, penned a letter,
+sublime in its force and simplicity, to Henry IV., conjuring him not
+to abandon the Protestant faith. The mention of this fact recalls an
+interesting experience. I here allude to the incontestable advance
+of Protestantism in France. The traveller whose acquaintance with the
+country began a quarter of a century ago, cannot fail to be impressed
+with this fact. Alike in towns large and small, new places of worship
+have sprung up, Nevers now possessing an Evangelical church. And good
+was it to hear the appreciation of the little Protestant community from
+my Catholic landlady.
+
+"Yes," she said, "the Protestants here are worthy of all respect
+(_dignes gens_) and the pastor also; I esteem him much." Evidently the
+Lemaitre-Coppee-Deroulede dictum, "Only the Catholic can be called a
+Frenchman," is not accepted at Nevers.
+
+In dazzlingly brilliant weather, and amid glowing scenery, we continued
+our journey to Moulins, as we travelled by rail, and not by road unable
+to identify "the little opening in the road leading to a thicket" where
+Sterne discovered Maria. Has anyone ever identified the spot I wonder,
+poplar, small brook and the rest?
+
+Too soon were we also for "the heyday of the vintage, when Nature is
+pouring her abundance into everyone's lap." For the vintage, indeed,
+one must go farther. Sterne must have been thinking of Burgundy when he
+penned that line, or the phylloxera has brought about a transformation,
+vineyards here being changed into pastures. The scenery of the Allier,
+like that around Autun, recalls many parts of England. Meadows set
+around with hedges; little rises of green hill here and there; cattle
+browsing by quiet streams; just such pictures as we may see in our own
+Midlands. I well remember a remark of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton
+on this subject. We were strolling near his home, in the neighbourhood
+of Autun, one day, when he pointed to the landscape over against us.
+
+"How like that is to many an English scene," he said; "and maybe it was
+the English aspect of this region that tempted me to settle here." I had
+paid Moulins a hasty visit many years before, but, unlike Nevers and so
+many French towns, the _chef-lieu_ of the Allier does not improve upon
+further acquaintance. And I surmise, that such is the impression of my
+country people generally. English travellers must be few and far between
+at Moulins, or why should the appearance of two English ladies attract
+so much curiosity? Wherever we went, the good folks of Moulins, alike
+rich and poor, turned round to have a good look at us, even stopping
+short to stare. All this was done without any rudeness or remark, but
+such extraordinary behaviour can only be accounted for by the foregoing
+supposition. For some reason or other our compatriots do not, like
+Sterne and Maria go to Moulins.
+
+Why should an essentially aristocratic place be so ill-kept, not to say
+dirty? The town is no centre of industry. Tall factory chimneys do
+not disfigure its silhouette or blacken its walls. Handsome equipages
+enliven the streets. But the municipality, like certain saints of
+old, seem to have taken vows of perpetual uncleanliness. Alike the
+scavenger's broom and the dust-cart appear to be unknown.
+
+Whilst a riverside walk at Nevers presents nothing but cheerful bustle
+and an aspect of prosperity, here you approach the Allier through scenes
+of squalor and torpid neglect. The poorer inhabitants, too, are very
+un-French in appearance, wanting that personal tidiness characteristic
+of their country people in general. An aristocratic place, means an
+Ultramontane place, and every third man you meet in Moulins wears a
+soutane. What so many cures, Jesuits and Christian Brothers can find to
+do passes the ordinary comprehension.
+
+However interesting twins may be in the human family, monumental duality
+is far from successful. Unfortunately for this delightfully picturesque
+old town, its graceful Cathedral has, in the grand new church of
+Sacre-Coeur, a double. But--
+
+ "As moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine,"
+
+is the second self, the never to be obliterated shadow of the first and
+far more beautiful church.
+
+Two towers of equal height, twice two spires like as cherries and
+in close juxtaposition rise above the town, an ensemble spoiling the
+symmetry of outline and general effect.
+
+How much better off was Moulins when, instead of four spires, she
+gloried in two? Then, of a verity, the city would have presented as
+noble a view as those of La Charite and Nevers from the Loire.
+
+The ancient chateau now used as a prison and the Jacquemart or clock
+tower are rare old bits of architecture, of themselves worth the journey
+to Moulins. Jacquemart, it may be here explained, is a corruption of
+Jacques Marques, the name of a famous Flemish clockmaker who lived in
+the fourteenth century. Amongst other achievements of this artist is
+the clock of Notre Dame, Dijon, as curious in its way as the still
+more celebrated cock-crowing time-piece of Strasburg, and declared
+by Froissart to be the wonder of Christendom. World-wide became the
+reputation of Jacques Marques, and thus it came about that clock towers
+generally were called after his masterpieces.
+
+On my former hurried visit to Moulins, as was the case with my
+predecessor, Arthur Young over a hundred years before, "other
+occupations" had "driven even Maria and the poplar from my head, and
+left me no room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci." In other words, I had
+visited Rome without seeing the Pope.
+
+On this second, and more leisurely visit, I had ample opportunity of
+making up for the omission. Truly, the tomb of the last Montmorency
+deserves a deliberate examination. It is one of the most sumptuous
+monuments in the world and as a testimony of wifely devotion worthy to
+be ranked with that of the Carian Queen to her lord, the Mausolus, whose
+name is perpetuated in the word mausoleum.
+
+French history cannot be at everyone's fingers' ends, so a word here
+about the last of the Montmorencys, victim not so much of Richelieu's
+policy as of a kinsman's meanness.
+
+When the dashing, devil-me-care, hitherto fortunate Henri de
+Montmorency, Marshal of France and Governor of Languedoc, plotted
+against Richelieu or rather against the Royal supremacy, it was mainly
+at the instigation of Gaston of Orleans. No more abject figure in French
+annals than this unworthy son of the great Gascon, Henri IV., thus
+portrayed by one whose tongue was as sharp as his sword: "Gaston of
+Orleans," wrote Richelieu, "engaged in every enterprise because he had
+not the will to resist persuasion, dishonourably drawing back from want
+of courage to support his associates."
+
+In the conspiracy of Montmorency, Gaston had played the part of
+instigator, leaving the other to his fate as soon as the situation
+became perilous. Every effort was made to save the duke, but in vain,
+and at the age of thirty-seven he ended a brilliant, adventuresome life
+on the scaffold at Toulouse.
+
+One thought was uppermost in my mind when, a few years ago, I visited
+that city, the only French city that welcomed the Inquisition. As I
+stood in the elegant Capitol, musing on Montmorency's story, it occurred
+to me how few of us realise what a respecter of persons was French law
+under the ancien regime. Hard as seems the fate of this dashing young
+duke, we must remember what would have been his punishment, but for
+his titles of nobility. Death swift and sudden, in other words, by
+decapitation, was the choicest prerogative of the nobility; tortures
+before and after condemnation, breaking on the wheel, burning alive, and
+other hideous ends, being the lot of the people.
+
+This monument, so noteworthy alike from a historic and artistic point of
+view, was saved from destruction by ready wit. When, in the ferment of
+revolution, the iconoclastic spirit had got the upper hand, a citizen of
+Moulins met a mob, bent on destroying what they supposed to be the
+tomb of some hated grand seigneur, oppressor of the poor. Following the
+rabble to the convent, no sooner did he see the mallet and hammer raised
+than this worthy bourgeois, who himself deserves a monument, shouted,
+"Hands off, citizens! Yonder reposes no aristocrat, but as good a
+citizen as any man-jack of you, aye, who had the honour of losing his
+head for having conspired against a King."
+
+The crowd melted away without a word, the monument remains intact, and
+generations have had bequeathed to them an example of what presence of
+mind may effect, not with nerve, sinew, or bodily prowess, but with
+the tongue. The Convent of the Visitation, to which Montmorency's widow
+retired, and in the chapel of which she raised this memorial, is now
+converted into a Lycee. It is a handsome building and was built by
+Madame de Chantal, foundress of the Order of Visitadines, or nuns whose
+office it was to visit the sick. This pious lady, the friend of St.
+Francois de Sales, and herself canonised by Pope Benoit XIV., was the
+bosom friend of Felicia Orsini, Montmorency's wife, who succeeded her as
+Superior of the convent on her death.
+
+But even an abbess, who had taken the veil, could not refuse visits,
+some of which must have been as a second entering of iron into this
+proud woman's soul. The coward Gaston, when passing through Moulins,
+sought an interview. Richelieu, also, whose emissary received the
+following message: "Tell your master, that my tears reply for me and
+that I am his humble servant." Years after, Louis XIV. visited the once
+beautiful and high-spirited Italian, now an aged abbess occupying a
+bare cell and from his lips, despot and voluptuary though he was, might
+always be expected the right word in the right place. "Madame," he said,
+on taking leave, "we may learn something here. I need not ask you to
+pray for the King."
+
+[Illustration: TOMB OF MONTMORENCY, MOULINS.]
+
+But interest in personalities is leading me from what I have set myself
+to describe, namely, portraiture in marble. For this magnificent work
+thus perpetuates the last of the Montmorencys and his wife as they were
+when separated for ever in their prime. Imposing although the monument
+is as a whole, these two figures in white marble, standing out against
+a dark background, engross attention. The entire work covers the wall
+behind the high altar, the sculptures being in pure white marble, the
+framework in black. Dismissing the niched Mars and Hercules on the one
+side, the allegorised Religion and Charity on the other, we study the
+central figures both offering interest of quite different kind.
+
+Why a dashing soldier and courtier of the Renaissance should
+be represented in the guise of a Roman warrior, is an anomaly,
+irreconcilable as that of pagan gods and the personification of
+Christian attributes here placed vis-a-vis. Perhaps the grief-stricken
+wife, who was, as it appears, of a highly romantic and adventuresome
+turn, wished thus to commemorate the heroic qualities of her husband;
+she might also have wished to dissociate him altogether from his own
+time, a period of which, in her eyes, he would be the victim. Be this
+as it may, the Roman undress and accoutrements do not harmonise with a
+physiognomy essentially French and French of a given epoch. Whilst the
+interest aroused by the Duchess's effigy is purely artistic, that of her
+husband excites curiosity rather than admiration. The head is
+strangely poised, much as if the artist intended to suggest the fact
+of decapitation; obliquity of vision, a defect hereditary in the
+Montmorencys, is also indicated, adding singularity. The half-recumbent
+figure by the Duke's side, is of rare pathos and beauty. Almost angelic
+in its resignation and religious fervour is the upturned face. The
+drapery, too, shows classic grace and simplicity, as strongly contrasted
+with the martial travesty opposite as are the two countenances in
+expression.
+
+Long will art-lovers linger before this monument raised by wifely
+devotion, a monument, with so many another, perpetuating rather the
+devotion of the survivor than claims on posterity of the dead. And let
+not hasty travellers follow Arthur Young's example, jotting down, after
+a visit to Moulins, "No room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+SOUVIGNY AND SENS.
+
+A quarter of an hour by rail, an hour and a quarter by road, from
+Moulins lies Souvigny, the cradle of the Bourbons, and as interesting
+and delightful a little excursion as travellers can desire. On a glowing
+September morning the scenery of the Allier looked its very best. Never
+as long as I live shall I forget the beauty of that drive. Lightest,
+loveliest cumuli floated athwart a pure, not too dazzlingly blue sky,
+before us stretched avenue after avenue of poplar or plane trees,
+veritable aisles of green letting in the azure, reminding me of the
+famous Hobbema in our National Gallery. At many points the landscape
+recalled our native land; but for the white oxen of the Morvan, we
+might have fancied ourselves in Sussex or the Midlands. And cloudage,
+to borrow an expression of Coleridge, suggested England, too. Clouds and
+skies of the Midlands, none more poetic or pictorial throughout England
+seemed here--those skies above the vast sweeps of undulating chalk
+having a peculiar depth and tenderness, the clouds a marvellous
+brilliance, transparence, and variety of form! So beautiful are those
+cloud-pictures that we hardly needed beauty below. Here on the road to
+Moulins we had both, the landscape, if not romantic or striking, being
+rich in pastoral charm. Arthur Young, who looked at every bit of country
+first and foremost from the farmer's point of view, was so much struck
+with the neighbourhood of Moulins that, but for the Revolution, he would
+very probably have become a French landowner. Just eight miles from the
+city he visited in August, 1789, an estate was offered for sale by its
+possessor, the Marquis de Goutte. "The finest climate in France, perhaps
+in Europe," he wrote, "a beautiful and healthy country, excellent roads,
+and navigation to Paris; wine, game, fish, and everything appears on the
+table except the produce of the tropics; a good house, a fine garden,
+with ready markets for every kind of produce; and, above all the rest,
+three thousand acres of enclosed land, capable in a very little time of
+being, without expense, quadrupled in its produce--altogether formed a
+picture sufficient to tempt a man who had been twenty-five years in the
+constant practice of husbandry adapted to the soil." The price of the
+whole was only thirteen thousand and odd pounds, and the seller took
+care to explain that "all seigneurial rights _haute justice_" (that is
+to say, the privilege of hanging poachers, and others, at the chateau
+gates), were included in the purchase money. But the country was already
+in a ferment, and had our countryman struck a bargain then and there,
+the last-named extras would have proved a dead letter. Seigneurial
+rights were being abolished, or rather surrendered, at the very time
+that this transaction was under consideration. As Arthur Young tells
+us, he might as well have asked for an elephant at Moulins as for a
+newspaper. No one knew, or apparently cared to know, what was taking
+place in Paris. On asking his landlady for a newspaper, she replied she
+had none, they were too dear. Whereupon the irate traveller wrote down
+in his diary: "it is a great pity that there is not a camp of _brigands_
+in your coffee room, Madame Bourgeau."
+
+This part of France is not a region of prosperous peasant farmers, nor
+is it a chess-board of tiny crops, the four or five acre freeholds of
+small owners cut up into miniature fields. I had a long talk with a
+countryman, and he informed me that, as in Arthur Young's time, the land
+belongs to large owners, and is still, as in his time, cultivated by
+_metayers_ on the half-profit system. At the present day, however,
+another class has sprung up, that of tenant farmers on a considerable
+scale; these, in their turn, sublet to peasants who give their labour
+and with whom they divide the profits. Now, the half-profit system does
+certainly answer elsewhere; in the Indre, for example, it has proved a
+stepping-stone to the position of small capitalist. Here I learned, with
+regret, that such is not the case. Land, even in the highly-favoured
+Allier, cannot afford a triple revenue. In the Indre, on the contrary,
+there is no intermediary between land-owners and _metayers_, the former
+even selling small holdings to their labourers as soon as they have
+saved a little capital.
+
+"No; folks are not prosperous hereabouts," said my informant. "There are
+no manufacturers at Moulins to enrich the people, and, what with high
+rents and low prices, the half-profit system does not pay. If money is
+made, it is by the tenant-farmer, not by the _metayer_." Curious and
+instructive is the fact that the most Catholic and aristocratic centres
+in France should often be the poorest; Moulins and the Allier afford but
+one example out of many.
+
+A beautiful drive of an hour and a quarter brought us within sight of
+Souvigny. Towering above the bright landscape rose the Abbey Church,
+its sober dun, red and brown hues, the quaint houses of similar colour
+huddled around it, contrasted with the dazzling brightness of sky and
+verdure.
+
+Still more striking the contrast between the pile so majestic and
+surroundings so homely! Here, as at La Charite, nothing is in keeping
+with the mass of architecture, which, in its apogee, stood for the town
+itself, what of town, indeed, there was being the merest accessory,
+inevitable but unimposing entourage, growing up bit by bit. The present
+population of Souvigny is something over three thousand, doubtless, as
+in the case of La Charite, less than that of its former monastery and
+dependencies. As we wind upwards, thus flanking the town and abbey,
+we realise the superb position of this cradle and mausoleum of the
+Bourbons. For Souvigny was both. Two thousand and odd years ago, here,
+in the very heart of France, Adhemar, a brave soldier, nothing more,
+became the first "Sire de Bourbon," Charles le Simple having given
+him the fief of Bourbon as a reward for military services, its chief
+establishing himself at Souvigny, and of course founding a religious
+house. The Benedictine abbey, being enriched with the bones of two
+saints, former Abbots of Cluny, became a famous pilgrimage. Adhemar's
+successors transferred their seat of seigneurial government to
+Bourbon l'Archimbault, but for centuries here they found their last
+resting-place, and here they are commemorated in marble.
+
+Indescribably picturesque is this whilom capital of the tiny feudal
+kingdom; topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, coated of many colours are its
+zig-zag little streets, one house tumbling on the back of its neighbour,
+another having contrived to wedge itself between two of portlier bulk,
+a third coolly taking possession of some inviting frontage, shutting out
+its fellow's light, air, and sunshine; here, meeting the eye, breakneck
+alley, there aerial terrace, and on all sides architectural reminders of
+the Souvigny passed away, the Souvigny once so splendid and important,
+now reduced to nothingness, as is, politically speaking, the so-called
+House of France.
+
+The Abbey Church, like that of La Charite, shows a mixture of many
+styles, the general effect being magnificent in the extreme. Throughout
+eastern France you find no more imposing facade. But, as observes M.
+Emile Montegut, in the work before quoted, the church has been created
+as Nature creates a soil, each age contributing its layer; Byzantine,
+Roman, Gothic, each style is here seen, the latter in its purity.
+
+Whilst the church itself stands taut and trim, a mass of sculptured
+masonry in rich browns and reds, the interior shows melancholy
+dilapidation. But, indeed, for the stern lessons of history, how sad
+were the spectacle of these mutilated effigies in marble, exquisite
+sculptures when fresh from the artist's hand, to-day torsos so hideously
+hacked and hewn as hardly to look human! We cannot, however, forget that
+the history of races, as of nations and individuals, is retributive.
+When the 'Roi-Soleil,' that incarnation of the Bourbon spirit, was
+so inflated with his own personality as to forbid the erection of
+any statue throughout France but his own, he paved the way for the
+revolutionary iconoclasts of a century later. It was simply a recurrence
+of the old fatality, the inevitable moral, since History began.
+
+For here, defaced to such a point that sculptures they can be called
+no longer, are memorialised not only Louis XIV.'s ancestors, but his
+offspring, namely, Louise Marie, one of his seven children by Madame
+de Montespan, all, as we know, with those of Madame de la Valliere,
+legitimised, ennobled and enriched. Pierre de Beaujeu, husband of the
+great Anne of France, was also buried here. Anne it was who, on the
+death of Louis XI., governed France with all her father's astuteness,
+but without his cruelty, and pleasant and comforting it is to find that
+Duke Pierre, her husband, seconded her in every way, himself remaining
+in the background, acting to perfection the difficult role of Prince
+Consort. The sight of these once exquisite marbles may perhaps awaken
+in other minds the reflection that crossed my own. Heretical as I shall
+seem, I venture to express the opinion, that in such cases one of two
+courses are advisable, either the removal of the torsos, or restoration;
+why should not some genius be able in this field to do what Viollet
+le Duc has so successfully achieved in another? But for that great
+architect, the cathedral of Moulins--and how many other beautiful French
+churches?--would long ago have tumbled to pieces, been handed over as
+storage to corn merchants, or brewers! Is it so much more difficult to
+restore a marble effigy, whether of human being or animal, than a facade
+or an altar-piece? If impossible, then, I say, let broken marbles like
+those of Souvigny be hidden from view.
+
+The agreeable town of Sens on the Yonne is here described for
+completeness' sake. Although not lying in the Bourbonnais, Sens formed
+the last stage of our little tour in this direction, a direct line of
+railway connecting the town with Moulins. What a change we found here!
+Instead of unswept, malodorous streets, and sordid riverside quarters,
+all was clean, trim, and cared for, one wholly uncommon feature lending
+especial charm.
+
+For the tutelar goddess of Sens, benignant genius presiding over the
+city, is a stream, or rather parent of many streams, that water the
+streets of their own free will, supplying thirsty beasts with copious
+draughts in torrid weather, and keeping up a perpetual air of rusticity
+and coolness.
+
+Wherever you go you are followed by the musical ripple of these
+runlets, purling brooks so crystalline that you are tempted to look for
+forget-me-nots.
+
+The voluntariness of this street watering constitutes its witchery. Post
+haste flows each tiny course; not having a moment to spare seems every
+current. Need we wonder at the fabled Arethusas and Sabrinas of more
+youthful worlds?
+
+Of itself Sens is very engaging. We can easily understand the fact of
+the late Mr. Hamerton having made his first French home here. In the
+memoir of her husband, affixed to his autobiography, Mrs. Hamerton gives
+us particulars, not only of individual, but of super-personal interest.
+I use the last expression because the idiosyncrasy described is common
+to most men and women of genius or exceptional talent. The charming
+essayist then, the art-critic, gifted with so much insight and
+feeling settled down at Sens we are told, for the purpose of painting
+'commission pictures.' His career was to be decided by the brush and not
+by the pen. The author of "The Intellectual Life," with how many other
+works of distinction, had, at the outset, wholly mistaken his vocation.
+"The first thing considered by Gilbert when he settled at Sens," writes
+Mrs. Hamerton, "was the choice of subjects for his commission pictures,
+which he intended to paint directly from nature; and he soon selected
+panoramic views from the top of a vine-clad hill, called Saint Bon,
+which commands an extensive view of the river Yonne, and of the plains
+about it." Unfortunately, rather we should say fortunately, anyhow,
+for the reading world, the 'commission pictures' were declined. The
+disappointed artist, out of humour with Sens, made a series of journeys
+in search of an ideal home, the result being that most entertaining and
+successful book, "Round My House," and the final devotion of its author
+to letters.
+
+Sens might well seem an ideal place of abode to many. Formed from the
+ancient Province of Burgundy, the Department of the Yonne has the charm
+of Burgundian scenery, with the addition of a wide, lovely river.
+All travellers on the Lyons-Marseilles Railway will recall the noble
+appearance of the town from the railway--the Cathedral, with its one
+lofty tower, rising above grey roofs, no factory chimneys marring the
+outline, and, between bright stretches of country, the Yonne, not least
+enchanting of French rivers, if not the most striking or romantic,
+perhaps the sweetest and most soothing in the world. The favourable
+impression of Sens gained by this fleeting view, is more than justified
+on nearer acquaintance. The Cathedral, externally less imposing than
+those of Bourges, Rheims, or even Rodez and Beauvais, is of a piece
+alike without and within, no tasteless excrescence disfiguring its
+outer walls, little or no modern tawdriness to be seen inside, an
+architectural gem of great purity. For the curious in such matters, the
+sacristy offers many wonders, among others a large fragment of the
+true cross, presented to Sens by Charlemagne. Less apocryphal are the
+vestments of our own Archbishop Thomas, alb, girdle, stole, and the
+rest, all most carefully preserved and exhibited in a glass case. It
+will be remembered that, when the turbulent Thomas of London, afterwards
+known as Becket, was condemned as a traitor, he fled to France. "This is
+a fearful day," said one of his attendants on hearing the sentence. "The
+Day of Judgment will be more fearful," replied Thomas. It was not at
+Sens, however, that the refugee took up his abode, but in the Abbey of
+St. Colombe, now in ruins hard by.
+
+On the other side of the bridge, crowning an islet, stands one of those
+curious church_lets_, or churc_lings_ I was about to say, that possess
+so powerful a fascination for the archaeological mind. Particularly
+striking was the little Romanesque interior in the September twilight,
+a picturesque group of Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul, rehearsing
+canticles with their pupils at one end, the subdued light just enabling
+us to realise the harmony of proportions. This little church of
+St. Maurice dating from the twelfth century, partly restored in the
+sixteenth, must not on any account be missed. Its pretty spire crowns
+the Isle d'Yonne, or island of the Yonne.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.
+
+Late and tired, I arrived, one September evening, at Arcis-sur-Aube,
+birthplace and home of the great Danton.
+
+I had brought with me letters of introduction to friends' friends,
+unaware that at such a moment the sign-manual of the President of the
+Republic himself would hardly have secured me a night's lodging. For
+at this especial moment the little town, from end to end, was in the
+possession of the military headquarters of that year's manoeuvres.
+
+Every private dwelling showed a notice of the officers in command
+sheltered under its roof. Here and there, the presence of sentinels
+indicated the location of generals. The hotels were crowded from
+basement to attic, folks who let lodgings for hire had made bargains
+long before, whilst the very poorest made up beds, or turned out of
+their own, to accommodate the rank and file. At the extreme end of the
+town, close to the ancestral home of the Dantons, stands the straggling
+old-fashioned Hotel de la Poste, a hostelry, I should suppose, not in
+the least changed since the days of the great conventionnel. All here
+was bustle and excitement. Mine host was spitting game in the kitchen,
+and could hardly find time to answer my application; soldiers and
+officers' servants, scullions and men of all-work, almost knocked
+each other down in the inn-yard, the landlady, generally so affable a
+personage in provincial France, gave me the cold shoulder. I turned out
+in the forlorn hope of finding a good Samaritan. Of course, to present
+a letter of introduction under such circumstances, was quite out of the
+question, my errand would have been the last hair to break the camel's
+back, final embarrassment of an already overdone hostess. But night was
+at hand; the last train to Troyes, the nearest town, had gone, no other
+would pass through Arcis-sur-Aube until the small hours of the morning.
+Unless I could procure a room, therefore, I should be in the position of
+a homeless vagrant. Well, not to be dismayed, I set out making inquiries
+right and left, to my astonishment being rebuffed rather surlily and
+with looks of suspicion. The fact is, during these manoeuvres, a
+lady arriving at head-quarters alone is apt to be looked upon with no
+favourable eye. Especially do people wonder what on earth can bring a
+foreigner to an out of the way country place at such a time--she must
+surely be a spy, pickpocket or something worse!
+
+After having vainly made inquiries to no purpose along the principal
+street, I turned into a grocer's shop in a smaller thoroughfare; two
+young assistants were chatting without anything to do, and they looked
+so good-natured that I entered and begged them to help me.
+
+Very likely an English hobbledehoy similarly appealed to would have
+blushed, giggled, and got rid of the stranger as quickly as possible;
+French youths of all ranks have rather more of the man of the world in
+them. The elder of the lads became at once interested in my case, and
+manifested a keen desire to be serviceable. Hailing a little girl from
+without, he bade her conduct me to a certain Mademoiselle D---- who let
+rooms and might have one vacant. The little maid, fetching a companion
+to accompany us--here also was a French trait; whatever is done, must be
+done sociably--took me to the address given; the demoiselle in question
+was, however, not at home, but the concierge said that, another
+demoiselle living near would probably be able to accommodate me, which
+she did. Before I proceed with my narrative, however, I must mention the
+ill fortune that befell my useful little cicerone.
+
+On taking leave I had given her half a franc, a modest recompense enough
+as I thought. The following story would seem to show that the good
+people of Arcis have not yet become imbued with modern ideas about
+money, also that they have a high notion of the value of truth. To my
+dismay I learnt next morning that the poor little girl had been soundly
+slapped, her mother refusing to believe that she had come honestly by so
+much money; as my hostess observed, the good woman might at least have
+waited for corroboration of the child's statement. A box of chocolate,
+transmitted by a third hand, I have no doubt acted as a consolation.
+
+Dear kind mademoiselle Jenny M---- How warmly she welcomed me to her
+homely hearth! My little purple rosette, insignia of an officer of
+Public Instruction of France, proved a bond of union. This excellent
+woman was the daughter of a schoolmaster who had himself worn the
+academic ribbon, a French schoolmaster's crowning ambition. He had left
+his daughter, in comfortable circumstances, that is to say, she enjoyed
+an annuity of L40 a year, the possession of a large, roomy house, part
+of which she let, and half an acre of garden full as it could be of
+flowers, fruit and vegetables. We at once became excellent friends.
+
+"Now," she said, "I am very sorry that my best bedroom is given up
+to soldiers, two poor young fellows I took in the other night out of
+compassion. You can, however, have the little back room looking on
+to the garden, it is rather in disorder, but you will find the bed
+comfortable. I cannot offer to do much for you in the way of waiting,
+having a lame foot, but a woman brings me milk early in the morning and
+she shall put a cupful outside your door; bread and butter you will find
+in the little kitchen next to your room."
+
+I assured her that such an arrangement would suit me very well, as I
+had my own spirit lamp and could make tea for myself; then we went
+downstairs. The great difficulty that night was to get anything to eat.
+The soldiers had eaten every body out of house and home, she assured me
+there was not such a thing as a chop or an egg to be had in the town for
+love or money. Fortunately, I had the remains of a cold chicken in my
+lunch basket, and this did duty for supper, my hostess pressing upon me
+some excellent Bordeaux.
+
+As we chatted, she mentioned the fact that two or three friends, much
+in the same situation as herself, occupied the little houses running
+alongside her garden.
+
+"We are all old maids," she informed me.
+
+"Old maids," quoth I, "how is that? I thought there were no single women
+out of convents in France."
+
+"The thing," she said, "has come about in this way--we have all enough
+to live upon, and so many women worsen their condition by marriage,
+instead of bettering it, that we made up our minds to live comfortably
+on what we have got, and not trouble our heads about the men. We
+live very happily together, and are all socialists, radicals, _libres
+penseuses_ and the rest. We read a great deal, and, as you will see
+to-morrow, my father left me a good library."
+
+As we sat at table in the somewhat untidy kitchen, my fellow guests, the
+conscripts, came in, they were pleasant, civil young fellows belonging
+to different classes of life. One was a middle-class civilian from an
+industrial city of the north, the other a homely peasant, son of the
+soil.
+
+These conscripts, however poorly fed in barracks, fare like aldermen
+during these manoeuvres, everybody giving them to eat and drink of their
+best. They had just dined plentifully, but for all that, managed to get
+down a bumper of wine immediately offered by Mademoiselle Jenny; a hunk
+of Dijon gingerbread they did evidently find some difficulty in getting
+through. We toasted each other in friendliest fashion, and the civilian,
+out of compliment to myself, drank to the health of the English army.
+
+Next morning I fared no less sumptuously than a soldier during the
+manoeuvres. A savoury steam had announced game for our mid-day meal.
+
+"Now," said my hostess, as she dished up and began to carve a fat
+partridge cooked to a turn--"this bird that came so apropos, is a
+present from a great-nephew of Danton. He is the _juge de paix_ here and
+a good neighbour of mine. We will pay him a visit this afternoon."
+
+Of this gentleman, of Danton's home and family, I shall say something
+later on. We made a round of visits that day, but the _juge de paix_,
+who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country
+in search of more partridges. Other friends and acquaintances we found
+at home; among these was a retired confectioner, who had once kept a
+shop in Regent Street, and had told Mademoiselle Jenny that she would be
+delighted to talk English with me.
+
+Warmly welcomed I was by the portly, prosperous looking pastry-cook,
+who was reading a newspaper and smoking a cigarette in a well-furnished,
+comfortable parlour. But alas! thirty years had elapsed since his
+departure from England, and during the interval he had never once
+interchanged a word with any of my country-people. To his intense
+mortification, he had completely lost hold of the English tongue!
+Another acquaintance, an elderly woman, who seemed to be living on small
+independent means, had a curious house pet. This, once a pretty little
+frisking lamb, had now reached the proportions of a big fat sheep. So
+docile and affectionate, however, was the animal, and so attached had
+the good soul become to it, that a pet it seemed likely to remain to the
+end of its days; the creature followed its mistress about like a dog.
+
+The little town of Arcis-sur-Aube, like many another, is now deserted by
+all who can get to livelier and more bustling centres. Tanneries, vest,
+stocking and glove weaving and stitching, are the only resources of the
+place.
+
+During my stay, I made the acquaintance of a charming family engaged in
+the latter trade. Stopping one day in front of a weaver's open door to
+watch him at work, I was cordially invited to enter. The head of the
+house, one of those quiet, intelligent, dignified artisans so typical of
+his class in France, was weaving vest sleeves at a hand loom, just as
+I had seen, at St. Etienne, ribbon weavers pursuing their avocations at
+home. As we chatted about his handicraft and its modest emoluments,
+his little son came in from school, a bright lad who, to his father's
+delight, had lately gained prizes. It is curious that only one part of
+a vest, stocking or glove is done by a single hand; some goods I found
+came to this house to be finished and others were sent away to be
+made ready for sale elsewhere. By-and-by, a pretty, refined girl, the
+daughter of the house, came in and asked me if I would like to see what
+she was doing.
+
+Forthwith she took me to a neat, cheerful little room upstairs
+overlooking a garden.
+
+On a table by the open window was a hand-sewing machine, and her
+occupation was the ornamental stitching of silk and cotton gloves by
+machinery. The pay seemed excessively low I thought, I believe something
+like twopence per dozen pair, but the young machinist seemed perfectly
+contented and happy.
+
+"It is pleasant," she said, "to be able to earn something at home and to
+live with papa and mamma and my little brother."
+
+Before leaving, with the prettiest grace in the world, she begged my
+acceptance of a dainty pair of lavender silk gloves knitted by her own
+hands.
+
+Some day I hope to revisit Arcis-sur-Aube, and meantime I hold
+occasional intercourse by post with my friends in Danton's town.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ARCIS-SUR-AUBE--(_continued_).
+
+But by far the most interesting acquaintance at this most historic
+little town was the great-nephew of Danton. Middle-aged, unpretentious
+of aspect, yet with that unmistakable look partly of dignified
+self-possession, partly of authority, seldom absent from the French
+official, I looked in vain for any likeness to the portraits of his
+great kinsman. Yet perhaps in the stalwart figure, manly proportions and
+bronzed complexion, might be traced some suggestion of the athlete, the
+strong swimmer, the bold sportsman, whose mighty voice once made Europe
+tremble. The brother of this gentleman also lived at Arcis-sur-Aube, but
+was absent during my visit. The _juge de paix_ and his family were on
+friendliest terms with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a
+chat.
+
+From him and other residents I gathered some interesting particulars
+about the Danton family. The great tribune left two little sons, George
+and Antoine, who grew up and resided in their ancestral home, hiding
+themselves from the world. Their young step-mother it was whose memory,
+when on the way to the guillotine, evoked from Danton the only betrayal
+of personal emotion throughout his stormy career: "Must I leave thee for
+ever, my beloved," then, quickly recovering himself, cried "Danton, no
+weakness!"
+
+Madame Danton married again and is lost sight of. One of Danton's
+sisters entered a convent, as it was supposed hoping to expiate by a
+life given up to prayer the crimes, as she deemed them, of her brother.
+Meantime, appalled by the shadow of their father's memory, George and
+Antoine decided to remain celibate, a pair marked out for solitude and
+obloquy.
+
+"Let the name of Danton perish from the recollection of man," they said.
+
+The elder, however, afterwards acknowledged and, I believe, legitimised
+a daughter according to the merciful French law. Mademoiselle Danton
+became Madame Menuel, and, strange as it may seem, at the time of my
+visit, this direct descendant of Danton was still living. President
+Carnot had given her a small pension in the form of a _bureau de tabac_
+at Troyes, where she died in 1896, leaving a son, who some years ago was
+divorced from his wife, emigrated to Buenos Ayres, and has never been
+heard of since. It is supposed that he is dead. The two great-nephews
+have each a son and a daughter living.
+
+The _juge de paix_ and his brother are now among the most respected
+citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their
+great ancestor. Neither of the pair inhabit the house in which Danton
+was born, and to which he ever returned with joy and satisfaction.
+
+A sight of Danton's house is sufficient to disprove the calumnies of
+that noble woman, but inveterate hater, Madame Roland.
+
+From her memoirs we might gather that Danton was a poverty-stricken,
+pettifogging lawyer of the basest class. That Danton's family belong to
+the well-to-do upper middle ranks, we see from the object lesson before
+us. At the time of my visit, this large, roomy, well-built house, with
+coach-house, stables and half-a-dozen acres of garden, orchard and wood,
+was to let for 700 francs a year. But so low a rent now-a-days is no
+indication of its value a hundred years ago.
+
+[Illustration: DANTON'S HOME AT ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.]
+
+The owner of the house most kindly showed me over every part.
+
+It is two-storeyed, plainly but solidly constructed, and evidently
+arranged, according to French fashion, for a combined tenancy. Two or
+three families could here well be accommodated under the same roof, each
+having separate establishments. I found myself in a covered carriageway,
+cool dark corridors leading to outhouses and stables, a wide staircase
+with handsome oak balustrade to upstair kitchen and bed-chambers, on
+either side of the ground floor were spacious salon and dining room,
+fronting town and river, water-mills and quays. In the vast kitchen was
+an enormous chopping block, suggestive of large family joints.
+
+My kind cicerone allowed me to linger in Danton's bed-chamber. I now
+looked out from the window at which the fallen leader was often seen
+by his townsfolk during the last days of his stormy career. In his
+night-cap the colossal figure might be descried gazing out into the
+night, as if peering into futurity, trying to read the future. Did he
+perhaps from time to time waver in his decision to abide his doom?
+We know that again and again his friends urged him to seek safety in
+flight.
+
+"Does a man carry his country on the sole of his shoe?" he retorted
+fiercely, but it may well be that he here envied weaker men. Danton's
+character was thoroughly French. His ambition was as he said to retire
+to Arcis-sur-Aube and there plant cabbages. A devoted son, husband and
+father, his affections were also centred upon others not of his blood
+and name. He tenderly loved his old nurse, and left her a small pension.
+Within the last thirty years, thanks to M. Aulard and his collaborators,
+the history of the Revolution has been written anew, or rather for the
+first time. The gigantic figure of Danton stands forth to-day in its
+true light, as the saviour of France from the fate of Poland, and as a
+founder of the democratic idea. He succumbed less because he was a rival
+of Robespierre than because he was a friend of humanity.
+
+"I would rather be guillotined than guillotine," he repeated, and it was
+mainly his effort to stay the Terror that made him its victim.
+
+The study adjoining contained that suggestive library of English,
+Spanish, Italian, and ancient classics of which his biographers have
+given us a catalogue, but which are now, alas! dispersed for ever.
+
+The house stands conspicuous, rearing a proud front to the world, if
+world could be used appropriately of so quiet, humdrum a little place.
+A few hundred yards off we reach the Church, Hotel de Ville and open
+square. In 1886, a monument to Danton was inaugurated here with much
+ceremony. A bronze statue represents the great tribune in the fiery
+attitude of an orator, pronouncing his immortal phrase:--
+
+_"De l'audace, encore de l'audace, toujours de l'audace!"_
+
+Arcis-sur-Aube is a little town of three thousand souls, within an
+hour's railway journey from Troyes. The river Aube (Alba), so called
+from its silveriness flows by Danton's house. In his time and up to the
+opening of the railways the place was a port of some importance. Boats
+and barges carried goods to Troyes, Bar-sur-Aube and other towns.
+
+Of late years Arcis has been partially surrounded with pleasant shady
+walks greatly appreciated by the townsfolk. Regretfully I quitted my
+circle of acquaintances here, little dreaming under what interesting
+circumstances I should next meet Danton's great-nephew.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+RHEIMS.
+
+The grandest of all the grand cathedrals in France has been so fully
+described elsewhere, that I will not attempt to do justice to the
+subject myself. During one of my numerous visits to Rheims, however, it
+was my good fortune to enjoy a very rare experience. On the occasion of
+President Faure's funeral, the great _bourdon_ or bell, formerly only
+tolled for the death of monarchs, was now heard for the second time
+during the Third Republic. Standing under the shadow of that vast
+minster the sound seemed to come from east and west, from above and
+below, dwarfing the hum of the city to nothingness, as if echoing from
+the remotest corners of France. It was no heroic figure now knelled by
+the deepest-voiced bell in the country, but in the person of the Havre
+tanner raised to the dignity of a ruler, was embodied a magnificent
+idea, the sovereignty of the people and the overthrow of privilege.
+Never as long as I live shall I forget the boom of that great bell, and
+long the solemn sound lingered on my ears.
+
+A few days later the interior of the vast Cathedral echoed with sound
+almost as overwhelming in its force and solemnity. A grand mass was
+given in honour of the dead President.
+
+In front of the high altar stood a lofty catafalque, the rich purple
+drapery blazing with gold. The nave was filled with dazzling uniforms
+and embroidered vestments. In especially reserved seats sat the officers
+of the Legion of Honour, among these in civilian dress figuring the
+honoured citizen of Rheims who has ever retained English nationality,
+Mr. Jonathan Holden.
+
+What with beating drums, clashing cymbals, blaring trumpets and pealing
+organ, the tremendous vault seemed hardly capacious enough for the
+deafening combination of sound. As a relief came the funeral march of
+Chopin, the more subdued strains seeming almost inaudible after the
+tumult of the moment before. Never surely had plebeian requiem so
+imperial!
+
+The rich, artistic and archaeological treasures of Rheims are well
+known. I will now describe one or two sights which do not come in the
+way of the tourist.
+
+One of these is the so-called "Maison de Retraite" or associated
+home for people of small means. The handsome building, with its large
+grounds, accommodating three hundred tenants, is neither a hotel nor a
+boarding establishment, least of all an almshouse.
+
+Under municipal patronage and support the "Maison de Retraite" offers
+rooms, board, attendance, laundress and even a small plot of garden for
+the annual sum of L16 to L24 per inmate, the second sum procuring
+larger rooms and more liberal fare. Personal independence is absolutely
+unhampered except by the fact that the lodge gate is closed at 10 p.m.
+As most of the tenants of the home are elderly folks, such a rule is
+no hardship. One great advantage of the system is the protection thus
+afforded to single women and old people, and the immunity from
+household cares. Meals are taken in common, but otherwise intercourse is
+voluntary. The French temperament is so sociable, however, and chat
+is such a necessity of existence, that we saw many groups on garden
+benches, and also in the recreation and reading rooms. When the
+number of small _rentiers_ is considered, i.e., men and women of
+the middle-class living upon a minimum income, we can understand
+the usefulness of this home. I learned that the establishment is
+self-supporting, the initiatory expense having been borne by the town
+and philanthropists.
+
+We strolled about with one of the managing staff finding the inmates
+very sociable; one elderly gentleman invited us to sit down in his bit
+of garden, very proud, as he might well be, of all the flowers he had
+contrived to crowd into so small a space. We were also welcomed into
+some of the neat interiors, these varying in size according to the scale
+of payment. The class profiting by this associated home was evidently
+that of the small _bourgeoisie_.
+
+Children there seemed to be none, one and all of the tenants being
+elderly widows, widowers, bachelors or spinsters. There were, however,
+a few married couples, who, if they preferred it, could cook their
+own meals at home. For single, middle-class women here was a refuge
+answering to the conventual boarding house of the upper classes.
+
+Unmarried women in France are not nearly so numerous as in England,
+and I must say they may well envy their English and American sisters
+in spinsterhood. An unmarried French lady belonging to genteel society
+cannot cross the street unaccompanied till she has passed her fortieth
+year, nor till then may she open the pages of Victor Hugo or read a
+newspaper. Even in this "Maison de Retraite" special provision was made
+for the privacy of single ladies; whether they liked it or not they were
+expected to eat in a separate dining room, and meet for social purposes
+in a separate salon. As there is no limit to the emotional period and
+the age of sentiment, perhaps these safeguards of propriety are not
+wholly superfluous.
+
+Of course the economy of such an arrangement is very great. Think of
+a respectable fairly-educated young woman getting what good old John
+Bunyan calls "harbour and good company," in other words, all the other
+necessaries of life, with society into the bargain, for L16 a year! The
+attendance is of course somewhat rough and ready. We saw a stalwart,
+rough-haired, rather masculine-looking female setting one of the
+dinner-tables with a clatter that would drive the fastidious to
+distraction. But the good soul had evidently her heart in her work, and
+I dare aver that single-handed she got through as much as three English
+housemaids with ourselves. Would such a scheme answer in England? I
+doubt it. The Anglo-Saxon character is the reverse of sociable, and
+class distinctions are so in-rooted in the English nature that it would
+be very difficult to get ten English women together who considered
+themselves belonging to precisely the same class.
+
+Furthermore, are there with us many widows or spinsters of the same
+class enjoying even such small independent means as the sums above
+mentioned? In France, teachers, tradeswomen, female clerks and others,
+by dint of rigid economy, usually insure for themselves a small income
+before reaching old age. Fortunately habits of thrift are increasing
+in England, and our women workers have a larger field and earn higher
+wages. I had also the privilege of seeing the great wool-combing factory
+of our countryman Mr. Jonathan Holden, for upwards of forty years a
+citizen of Rheims. This town has been for centuries one of the foremost
+seats of industry in France. Mr. Holden's chimneys are kept going night
+and day, Sundays excepted, with alternating shifts of workmen. All
+the hands employed are of French nationality and--a fact speaking
+volumes--no strike has ever disturbed the amicable relations of English
+employer and French employed. The great drawback to an inspection of
+these workshops is the din of the machinery and the odour of the
+skins. But there is something that takes hold of the imagination in the
+perfection to which machinery has been carried. As we gaze upon these
+huge engines, only occasionally touched by a woman's hand, we are
+reminded of man, the pigmy guiding an elephant. We seem conscious,
+moreover, of what almost approaches human intelligence, so much of the
+work achieved appearing voluntary rather than automatic. The skins reach
+Rheims direct from Australia and are here dressed, cleaned and prepared
+for working up into cloth. If machinery is brought almost to the
+perfection of manual dexterousness, human beings attain the precision of
+machinery.
+
+I saw a neatly dressed girl at work whose sole occupation it was to tie
+up the wool, now white as snow and soft as silk, into small parcels. The
+wool already weighed came down by a little trough, and as swiftly and
+methodically as wheels set in motion, the girl's fingers folded the
+paper and tied the string. I should not like to guess how many of these
+parcels she turned off in half a minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+RHEIMS--(_continued_).
+
+Rheims possesses a handsome theatre, the acquaintance of which I
+was enabled to make under exceptional circumstances. At the risk of
+appearing slightly egotistical, I will here describe an incident which
+has other than personal interest. My visit to Damon's country, the
+particulars of which were given in a former chapter, had an especial
+object, viz., the setting of a novel of my own having the great
+conventionnel for its hero. The story was dramatised by two French
+collaborators, one of whom was at that time stage manager of the Grand
+Theatre, Rheims. What, then, was my delight to see one morning placarded
+throughout the town the announcement of the Anglo-French play? A few
+days before the first representation I had witnessed a rehearsal, and as
+I was guided through the dusky labyrinths of the theatre I could realise
+the excessive, the appalling, combustibility of such buildings. It
+is difficult, moreover, for those who have never penetrated into such
+recesses--whose only acquaintance is with the representation on the
+stage--to imagine how gloomy and sepulchral "behind the scenes"
+may appear. However, by-and-by it was all cheerful enough, and the
+rehearsal, I must say, although of a tragedy, abounded in touches of
+humour. My friend and myself were accommodated with chairs just in
+front of the stage near the prompter, a very friendly personage, who
+was evidently interested in the fact of my presence. The actors and
+actresses dropped in one by one and we exchanged a cordial handshake.
+There was nothing theatrical about the dress or manners of these ladies,
+whose ages ranged from extreme youth to middle age. They all looked
+pleasant, lady-like, ordinary women, who might have quitted their
+housekeeping or any other occupation of a domestic nature. The men, too,
+impressed me agreeably as they greeted myself and their colleagues. Very
+amusing was the commencement of proceedings.
+
+"Come, my children, put yourselves into position," said the stage
+manager, making corrections or suggestions as he went on; now somebody
+spoke too loud, and now somebody was too inarticulate, now an arm was
+held too forward, and now a leg dragged too much. Excessively diverting,
+also, the dummy show. In one scene of the play, a village schoolmaster
+is holding a class of little boys and girls. To-day, a row of chairs
+did duty for the scholars and were duly harangued, catechised, and even
+admonished with a cane. In another scene, a peasant woman appears with
+her donkey, to whom she confides a long tirade of troubles, the donkey
+for the moment being like the showman's hero in the famous story, "round
+the corner." A third and still more amusing piece of dumb show occurred
+later, when an ex-abbess acting as housekeeper to the village cure, let
+fall a basket of potatoes which were supposed to roll about the stage.
+All went well and the prompter, to whom I appealed for an opinion,
+assured me that I need be under no uneasiness, for the piece would go
+off like a house on fire.
+
+In spite of that favourable prognostic an author's first night is always
+a nervous affair, especially when that author is a foreigner, and her
+piece a translation from the original.
+
+However, everything went merry as a marriage bell, my kind friends
+filled several boxes, and perhaps one of the most interesting
+incidents of the evening was the fact that just underneath sat Danton's
+great-nephew with his clerk, who had come from Arcis-sur-Aube expressly
+for the occasion. Between the acts I went down and chatted with these
+two gentlemen, also with a French friend who had travelled from Dijon--a
+six hours' railway journey--in order to witness the piece. To the best
+of my knowledge now for the first time Danton figured on the French
+stage.
+
+It must be confessed that the theatre on this especial night was not a
+crowded house. In the first place, three large soirees, which had been
+postponed on account of the President's funeral, coincided with the
+representation. In the second place, as a rule, the wealthier and more
+fashionable classes do not patronise provincial theatres, especially
+when residing within easy reach of Paris. However, the pit and gallery
+were packed, and loud was the applause with which the appearance
+of Danton in a blue tail coat, top boots and sash, and his vehement
+utterances were greeted.
+
+It had never crossed my mind that under such circumstances an author
+would be called for; when, indeed, at the close of the piece, cries of
+"Auteur! auteur!" were heard throughout the theatre, my friends begged
+me to show myself. Which, proudly enough, I did, first saluting the
+sovereign people in the gallery, then bowing less beamingly to the
+scantier audience in the boxes, finally acknowledging the acclamations
+from the pit. If "Danton a Arcis" brought its author neither fame nor
+fortune, it certainly repaid her in another and most agreeable fashion.
+Two or three days later, a second representation of the piece at
+popular prices was given, and upon that occasion the house was full to
+overflowing.
+
+The Grand Theatre, Rheims, is a very handsome building, and like most
+other provincial houses maintains a company of its own, although from
+time to time it is visited by the best Paris troupes.
+
+Yet another uncommon recollection of Rheims must here be recorded. In
+September of last year, I witnessed such a spectacle as my military
+friends assured me had never before been afforded to the marvel-loving;
+in other words, the sight of a hundred and sixty thousand men--a host
+perhaps more numerous than any ever commanded by Napoleon--performing
+evolutions within range of vision.
+
+By half-past five in the morning I was off from Paris with my host and
+hostess in their motor car for the Northern railway station. The day
+of the great review broke dull and grey, and deserted indeed looked the
+usually gay and lively Paris streets. We reached the station at five
+minutes to six, i.e., five minutes before the starting of our train, and
+at once realised the neatness with which the day's programme had been
+arranged, both by the railway companies and the Government. The tens
+of thousands of sightseers had been despatched to Rheims by relays of
+trains during the night, and the station was now kept clear for the
+numerous specials conveying members of the Senate, the Chamber, and the
+Press. Here, therefore, was no crowding whatever, only a quiet stream
+of deputies, wearing their tricolour badges accompanied by their ladies,
+each deputy having the privilege of taking two.
+
+Precisely on the stroke of six, our long and well-filled train
+consisting of first-class carriages only steamed out of the station,
+taking the northern route and only making a short halt at Soissons. No
+sooner had we joined the Compiegne line than we realised the tremendous
+precautions necessary in the case of visitors so august; double rows of
+soldiers were placed at short intervals on either side of the railway
+and detachments of mounted troops stationed at a distance guarded the
+route. The arrangements for our own comfort were perfect. Our train set
+us down, not at Rheims, but at Betheny itself the scene of the review, a
+temporary station having been there erected. We were, therefore within a
+hundred yards or so of our tribune, or raised stage, and of the luncheon
+tents, roads having been laid down to each by the Genie or engineering
+body. Numbered indications conspicuously placed quite prevented any
+confusion whatever, and, indeed, it was literally impossible for
+anyone to miss his way. The only eventuality that could have spoiled
+everything, wet weather, fortunately held off until the show was over.
+The review itself was a magnificent spectacle, surely not without irony
+when we consider that this great military display, one of the greatest
+on record, was got up in honour of the first Sovereign in the world who
+had dared to propose a general disarmament! Another line of thought was
+awakened by the fact of our isolation. The specially invited guests
+of the French Government upon this occasion numbered three thousand
+persons, and it seemed that for the Czar, his train, and these, the
+great show was got up. The thousands of outsiders, sightseers, and
+excursionists, brought to Rheims by cheap trains from all parts of
+France, were nowhere; in other words, invisible.
+
+Whether or no such spectators got anything like a view of the evolutions
+I do not know. I should be inclined to think that from the distance at
+which they were kept the moving masses were mere blurs and nothing
+more. From our own tribune, adjoining that of the Presidential party,
+we commanded a view of the entire forces covering the vast plain,
+surrounded by rising ground.
+
+Amazing it was to see the dark immovable lines slowly break up, and
+as if set in motion by machinery, deploy according to orders. The vast
+plain before us was a veritable sea of men, an army, one would think,
+sufficient for the military needs of all Europe.
+
+One striking feature of these superb regiments, cavalry as well as
+infantry, was the excellence of the bands. Never before had I realised
+the inspiriting thing that martial music might be. Another interesting
+point was that afforded by the cyclists, several regiments having these
+newly formed companies. Whenever a flag was borne past, whether by foot
+or mounted soldier, the cheering was tremendous, but it was reserved for
+a regiment of Lorrainers to receive a veritable ovation. Still so fondly
+yearns the heart of France after her lost and mutilated provinces! On
+the whole, and speaking as a naive amateur, I should say that no country
+in the world could show a grander military spectacle. Enthusiasm reigned
+amongst all beholders, but there was no display of political bias or any
+discordant note. Cries of "Vive la France!" were as frequent as those of
+"Vive l'armee!"
+
+Not a policeman was to be seen anywhere, the deputies keeping order for
+themselves. And not always without an effort! People would rise from
+their seats, even stand on benches, despite the thundered out "Remain
+seated!" on all sides. On the whole, and with this exception, nothing
+could surpass the general good humour. And when the splendid cortege
+filed by at the close, delight and satisfaction beamed on every face. M.
+Loubet was so dignified, folks said, Madame Loubet was so well dressed,
+the deportment of M. Waldeck Rousseau was perfect, M. Deschanel
+handsomer than ever, and so on, every member of the Czar's, or rather
+the President's, entourage winning approval. General Andre and M.
+Delcasse were very warmly received. The slim, pale, fastidious looking
+young man in flat, white cap, green tunic, and high boots, seated beside
+the portly, genial figure wearing the broad Presidential ribbon, set me
+thinking. How at the bottom of his heart does the Autocrat of All The
+Russias view these representatives of the great French Republic! How
+does he really feel towards France, the first nation of the western
+world to set the example of officially recognised self-government, the
+initiator of a system as opposed to Russian despotism as is white
+to black? Whatever may be the secret of this strange Franco-Russian
+alliance, it is apparently in the interest of peace, and, as such,
+should be warmly welcomed by all advocates of progress.
+
+The luncheon was superabundant, consisting of wines, cold meat, and
+bread in plenty. The task of finding refreshment for three thousand
+people had been satisfactorily solved. The only thing wanting was
+water. It seems that upon such an occasion no one was expected to drink
+anything short of Bordeaux, Burgundy, or pale ale.
+
+All the special trains were crowded for the return journey, made by way
+of Meaux, but everyone made way for everyone, and we reached Paris at
+eight o'clock, almost as fresh and quite as good-humoured as we had
+quitted it at dawn. If this great review was interesting from one point
+more than another, it was from the manner in which it displayed the
+wonderful organising faculty of the French mind. The most trifling
+details no more than the largest combinations can disconcert this
+pre-eminently national aptitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+
+The first of these places mentioned is a Champenois village twelve miles
+from a railway station. From the windows of my friends' chateau I look
+upon a magnificent deer park, where during the oft-time torrid heat of
+summer delicious shade is to be found.
+
+Far away vast forests bound the horizon, to the north a hot open road
+leading to Brienne-le-Chateau, where Napoleon studied as a military
+cadet; eastward, lies varied scenery between Soulaines and Bar-sur-Aube,
+there woodland ending and the vine country beginning.
+
+On one especial visit during September, not even these acres of
+closely-serried forest could induce more than a suggestion of shadow and
+coolness. Although screened from view the sun was there. Throughout a
+vast region--half a province of woodland--folks breathed the hot air of
+the Soudan. The tropic temperature admitted of no exercise during the
+day, but after four o'clock tea we broke up into parties--drove, rode,
+strolled, called upon homelier neighbours, visited quaint old churches
+hidden in the trees or forest nooks, the solitude only broken by
+pattering of deer and rabbits, or nut-cracking squirrel aloft. Here
+and there we would come upon huts of charcoal-burner and wood-cutter,
+gamekeepers and foresters, too, had their scattered lodges; such signs
+of human habitation being few and far between.
+
+We are here in the remnant of the great Celtic forest of Der. The
+straggling village of Soulaines is one long street, a little stream
+running behind the picturesque, timbered houses, many of these have
+outer wooden staircases leading to grange or storehouse. Church and
+presbytery, convent and Mairie were conspicuous.
+
+In the opposite direction, another church rose above the horizon, the
+centre of what in France is called not a village but a hamlet. Bare as
+a barn seen from far and near showed this little church, and we often
+walked thither for the sake of its picturesque surroundings. The portal
+of the quaint old building is a mass of ancient sculpture, close round
+it being grouped a few mud-built, timbered, one-storeyed dwellings all
+of a pattern.
+
+Even in France are to be found day labourers, only the very poorest,
+however, being without a cottage, plot of ground, a cow and of poultry
+their own. Many of their interiors are far neater and cleaner than those
+of the farm-houses, their occupants not being so tied to the soil from
+morning to night, not, in fact, incited to Herculean labours by the spur
+of larger possession. We visited one of the poorest villages hereabouts,
+of not quite a hundred souls, but of course, provided with church,
+school and Mairie. Many a group of potato diggers we saw in the
+exquisite twilight, suggestive of Millet, many a landscape recalling
+other masters. This handful of woodlanders--for the village is
+surrounded by forests--is perhaps as poor as any rural population to be
+found throughout France. Yet here surprises await us. Some of the better
+off hire a little land, keep cows, rear poultry, most likely in time to
+become owners of a plot. They are paid for harvest work in kind, several
+we talked to having earned enough corn for the winter's consumption--as
+they put it--our winter's bread. They are a fine, sunburnt, well-formed
+race and seem cheerful enough. In one of the poorest houses, a huge
+pipkin on the fire emitted savoury steam, and rows of small cheeses
+garnished the shelves. Good oak bedsteads, linen presses and
+old-fashioned clocks were general. Every mantel-piece had its framed
+photograph and ornamental crockery. New milk was always freely offered
+us.
+
+Within the precincts of this hamlet we find ourselves in a bluish-green
+land of mingled wood and water; above the reedy marsh, haunt of wild
+fowl, willows grew thick; here and there the water flowed freely, its
+surface broken by the plash of carp and trout. At this season all hands
+hereabouts were busy with threshing out the newly garnered corn and
+getting in potatoes. The crops are very varied, wheat, barley, lucerne,
+beetroot, buckwheat, colza, potatoes; we see a little of everything.
+Artificial manures are not much used, nor agricultural machinery to a
+great extent, except by large farmers, but the land is clean and in a
+high state of cultivation. Peasant property is the rule; labouring for
+hire, the condition of non-possession, very rare. And whether the times
+are good or evil, land dirt cheap or dear, the year's savings go to
+the purchase of a field or two and, as a necessary consequence, to
+the consolidation of the Republic and the maintenance of Parliamentary
+institutions.
+
+I will now say something of our neighbours. One of these was the parish
+priest, who had the care of between six and seven hundred souls. The
+fact may be new to some readers that a village cure, even in these days,
+receives on an average little more than Goldsmith's country parson,
+"counted rich on forty pounds a year." This cure's stipend, including
+perquisites amounted to just sixty pounds yearly, in addition to which
+he had a good house, large garden and paddock. But compare such a
+position with that of one of our own rectors and vicars!
+
+The Protestant clergy in France are better paid than those belonging
+to the orthodox faith. Being heads of families, they are supposed, and
+justly, to need more. Let it not be imagined, however, that the priest
+receives less under the Republic than under the Empire. But the cost of
+living has increased.
+
+Of course there are black sheep in the Romish fold as elsewhere; perhaps
+even the simplicity, learning and devotion to duty of the individual I
+here write of, are rare. Yet one cannot help feeling how much more
+money the Government would have at command with which to remunerate
+good workers in pacific fields if disarmament were practicable. This
+excellent priest, like other men of education and taste, would have
+relished a little travel as much as do our own vicars and curates their
+annual outing to Norway or Switzerland. What remains for recreation and
+charity after defraying household expenses and cost of a housekeeper out
+of sixty pounds a year?
+
+Next, let me say a word about the _juge de paix_ in France, as I presume
+most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than that
+of a priest. The average stipend of a justice of the peace is about a
+hundred pounds a year, with lodging, but although his duties often take
+him far afield he is not provided with a vehicle, and must either
+cycle or defray the cost of carriage hire. I know many of these rural
+magistrates, and have ever found them men of education and intelligence.
+I, now, for the first time, found one well read in English literature,
+not only able to discuss Shakespeare and Walter Scott, but the latest
+English novel appearing in translation as a feuilleton. It is well that
+these small officials should have such resources. Tied down as they are
+to remote country spots, their existence is often monotonous enough,
+especially during the winter months.
+
+It seems to be a canon of French faith that you cannot have too much
+of a good thing, anyhow in the matter of wedding festivities. Parisian
+society is beginning to adopt English saving of time and money,
+fashionable marriages there now being followed by a brief lunch and
+reception. Country-folks stick to tradition, preferring to make the
+most of an event which as a rule happens only once during a lifetime.
+Gratifying as was the experience to an English guest, especially that
+guest being a devoted admirer of France, I must honestly confess that my
+share in such a celebration constituted probably the hardest day's work
+I ever performed. Here I will explain that the bride's father was head
+forester of my host and hostess, the great folks of the place, and
+adored by their humbler neighbours. Chateau and cottage were thus
+closely, nay affectionately, interested in the important event I am
+about to describe, and this aspect of it is fully as noteworthy as the
+truly Gallic character of the long drawn out fete itself.
+
+By nine a.m. horses and carriages of the chateau, adorned with wedding
+favours, were flying madly about in all directions conveying the wedding
+party to and from the Mairie for the civil ceremony. An hour later we
+were ourselves off to the village church, the house party including
+three English guests. The enormously long religious ceremony over, a
+procession was formed headed by musicians, bride and bridegroom leading
+the way, fifty and odd couples following and the round of the village
+was made. At the door of the festive house we formed a circle, the
+newly-wedded pair embracing everyone and receiving congratulations;
+this is a somewhat lachrymose ceremony. The marriage was in every way
+satisfactory, but the nice-looking young bride, a general favourite, was
+quitting for ever her childhood's home. After some little delay we
+all took our places in two banqueting rooms, the tables being arranged
+horse-shoe wise. Facing bride and bridegroom sat my host, the second
+room being presided over by the bride's father, of whom I shall have
+something to say later. Here I give the bill of fare, merely adding that
+the festive board was neatly, even elegantly, spread, and that every
+dish was excellent:--
+
+ Hors d'oeuvre Salade de saison
+ Radis, beurre frais, Langue fumee Fruits
+ Bouchees a la Reine Brioche. Nougat
+ Daim, sauce chassuer Desserts varies
+ Galantine truffee Vins
+ Salmis de canards Pineau, Bordeaux, Champagne
+ Choux-fleurs Cafe, Liqueurs.
+ Dinde truffee.
+
+
+Looking down the lines of well-dressed people, all with the exception of
+ourselves belonging to the same rank as the bride, I could but be struck
+with the good looks, gentle bearing, and general appearance of everyone.
+As to the head forester, he was one of Nature's gentlemen, and might
+easily have passed for a general or senator. At the table sat several
+young girls of the village, each having a cavalier, all these dressed
+very neatly and comporting themselves like well-bred young ladies
+without presumption or awkwardness. During the inevitable pauses between
+dish and dish, one after another of these pretty girls stood up and
+gratified the company with a song, the performance costing perhaps an
+effort, but being got through simply and naturally. In the midst of the
+banquet, which lasted over three hours, two professionals came to sing
+and recite. From the breakfast table, after toasts,--the afternoon being
+now well advanced--we again formed a procession to the Mairie, in front
+of which _al fresco_ dancing commenced. Add that this out-of-door ball
+lasted till a second dinner, the dinner being followed by a second ball
+lasting far into the small hours. Nor did the celebration end here.
+The following day was equally devoted to visits, feasts, toasts, and
+dancing. What a national heritage is this capacity for fellowship,
+gaiety, and harmless mirth!
+
+Bar-sur-Aube lies twelve miles off and a beautiful drive it is thither
+from Soulaines. We gradually leave forest, pasture and arable
+land, finding ourselves amid vineyards. At the little village of
+Ville-sur-Terre, we one day halted at a farm-house for a chat, the
+housewife most kindly presenting me with two highly decorative plates.
+
+As we approach Bar-sur-Aube we come upon a wide and beautiful prospect,
+wooded hills dominating the plain.
+
+This little town is very prettily situated, and like every other in
+France possesses some old churches. Perhaps its most famous child is
+Bombonnel, the great panther-slayer, born close by, who died at Dijon
+and whose souvenirs bequeathed to me as a legacy I have given elsewhere.
+The son of a working glazier, he made a little fortune as hawker of
+stockings in the streets of New Orleans, returned to France, cleared
+the Algerian Tell of panthers, for a time enjoyed ease with dignity in
+Burgundy; on the outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870, as leader
+of a thousand _francs-tireurs_, gave the Germans more trouble than any
+commander of an army corps, twice had a price of L1,000 set upon his
+head, was glorified by Victor Hugo, received the decoration of the
+Legion of Honour, and as a reward for his patriotic services several
+hundred acres of land in Algeria. A gigantic statue of Sant Hubert, the
+patron of hunters, now commemorates the great little man, for he was
+short of statue, in the cemetery of Dijon.
+
+Bar-sur-Aube is connected with another notoriety, the infamous Madame
+de la Motte, the arch-adventuress, who, a descendant herself of Valois
+kings, proved the undoing of Marie Antoinette. As was truly said by
+a great contemporary:--"The affair of the Diamond Necklace," wrote
+Mirabeau, "has been the forerunner of the Revolution."
+
+This Jeanne de Valois, rescued from the gutter by a benovolent lady of
+title and a charitable priest, presents a psychological study rare even
+in the annals of crime. Never, perhaps, were daring, unscrupulousness,
+and the faculty of combination linked with so complete a disregard to
+consequences. The moving spring of her actions, often so complicated and
+foolhardy, was love of money and display. It seemed as if in her person,
+was accumulated the lavishness of French Royal mistresses from Diane
+de Poitiers down to Madame Dubarry. There was a good deal of the Becky
+Sharp about her too, although there is nothing in her history to show
+that, like Thackeray's heroine, "she had no objection to pay people if
+she had the money." If, indeed, anything in the shape of ethics guided
+the most astoundingly ingenious swindler we know of, it was some such
+principle as this: she ought to have been at Versailles, there being
+received as a recognised Princess of the Royal House; since, through
+no fault whatever of her own, she was not, she had a perfect right to
+avenge herself upon royalty and society in general.
+
+How she wormed herself into the confidence of the Cardinal de Rohan, a
+man of the world and of education, would seem wholly unaccountable
+but for one fact. The Prince Primate had faith in Cagliostro and
+his nostrums, and when an individual has recourse to astrologers
+and fortune-tellers, we are quite in a position to gauge his mental
+condition. Like Mdlle. Couesdon of contemporary fame, Cagliostro held
+intercourse with the angel Gabriel, but his occult powers and privileges
+far exceeded those of the Parisian lady-seer. He was actually in the
+habit of dining with Henri IV., and two days before the Cardinal's
+arrest made his client believe that he had just accepted such an
+invitation!
+
+It had been Rohan's ambition to obtain the favour of the Queen and a
+foremost position at court, hence the readiness with which he fell into
+the trap. For "the Valois orphan," now Comtesse de la Motte, not only
+possessed great personal attractions, but an extraordinary gift of
+persuasiveness. Without much apparent trouble she made the Cardinal
+believe that she was in the Queen's favour, and indeed in her
+confidence. Having got so far the rest was easy.
+
+How the acquisition of the already celebrated Diamond Necklace was first
+thought of, how, by the aid of willing tools, she matured and carried
+out her deep-laid and diabolical scheme, reads like an adventure from
+the "Arabian Nights." The personification of the Queen by a little
+dressmaker who happened to resemble her, the forgery of the Royal
+signature, the final attainment of the diamonds, all seemed so easy to
+this consummate trickster that it is small wonder she became intoxicated
+with success and blind to consequences. No sooner was the necklace in
+her possession than, of course, as fast as possible it was turned, not
+into money, but into money's worth. Houses and lands, equipages and
+furniture, costly apparel, and delicacies for the table were purchased,
+not with louis d'or, but with diamonds.
+
+We read of her triumphant entry into the little town of Bar-sur-Aube,
+cradle of the Saint Remy-Valois family, in a berline with white
+trappings and the Valois armorials, before and behind the carriage,
+which was drawn by "four English horses with short tails," rode
+lacqueys, whilst on the footboard ready to open the door stood a negro,
+"covered, from head to foot with silver." Still more dazzling was the
+dress of Madame la Comtesse, richest brocade trimmed with rubies and
+emeralds. As to the Count, not content with having rings on every finger
+he wore four gold watch chains! Besides holding open house when at home,
+the pair had a table always spread with dainties for those who chose to
+partake in their hosts' absence. Among the toys paid for in diamonds was
+an automatic bird that warbled and flapped its wings. This was intended
+for the amusement of visitors.
+
+The carnival proved of short duration. It was on the 1st of February,
+1783, that the diamond necklace was handed over to Madame de la Motte,
+Rohan receiving in return the forged signature of "Marie-Antoinette de
+France." On August of the same year, in the midst of a banquet given
+at Bar-sur-Aube, a visitor arrived with startling news. "The Prince
+Cardinal de Rohan, Grand Almoner of France, was on the Festival of
+Assumption, arrested in pontifical robes, charged with having purchased
+a diamond necklace in the name of the Queen."
+
+The charm of these little French towns and rustic spots lies in their
+remoteness, the feeling they give us of being so entirely aloof from
+familiar surroundings. In many a small Breton or Norman town we hear
+little else but English speech, and in the one general shop of tiny
+villages see _The New York Herald_ on sale. But from the time of leaving
+Nemours to that of reaching the farthest point mentioned in these
+sketches we encounter no English or American tourists. This essentially
+foreign atmosphere is not less agreeable than conducive to instruction.
+We are thus thrown into direct contact with the country people and are
+enabled to realise French modes of life and thought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.
+
+Within the last twenty-five years so many new lines of railway have been
+opened in France that there is no longer any inducement--I am inclined
+to say excuse--for keeping to the main road. Yet, strangely
+enough, English tourists mostly ignore such opportunities. For one
+fellow-countryman we meet on the route described here, hundreds are
+encountered on the time-honoured roads running straight from Paris to
+Switzerland. Quit Dijon by any other way and the English-speaking world
+is lost sight of, perhaps more completely than anywhere else on the
+civilised globe. Again and again it has happened to myself to be
+regarded in rural France as a kind of curiosity, the first subject of
+Queen Victoria ever met with; again and again I have spent days, nay
+weeks, on French soil, the sole reminder of my native land being the
+daily paper posted in London. It is now many years since I first visited
+St. Jean de Losne, in company of a French acquaintance, a notary, both
+of us being bound to a country-house on the Saone. At that time the
+railway did not connect it with Dijon, and in brilliant September
+weather we jogged along by diligence, a pleasant five hours' journey
+enough. My companion, a native of the Cote d'Or, seemed to know everyone
+we passed on the way, whenever we stopped to change horses getting out
+for a gossip with this friend and that he had taken the precaution to
+provide himself with a huge loaf of bread, from which he hacked off
+morsels for us both from time to time. As we had started at seven
+o'clock in the morning, and got no dejeuner till past noon, the doles
+were acceptable. The fellow-traveller of that first journey--alas! With
+how many friends of the wine country!--has long since gone to his rest.
+The second time I set forth alone, taking my seat in the slow--the very
+slow--train running alongside the Canal de Bourgogne. On the central
+platforms of the Dijon railway station, crowds of English and American
+tourists were hurrying to their trains, bound respectively for Paris and
+Geneva. No sooner was I fairly off, my fellow travellers being two or
+three country-folks, than the conventionalities of travel had vanished.
+Surroundings as well as scenery became entirely French.
+
+The Burgundian character is very affable, and although people may
+wonder what can be your errand in remote regions, they never show their
+curiosity after disagreeable fashion. They are delighted to discover
+that interest in France--artistic, economic, or industrial--has led you
+thither, and will afford any assistance or information in their power.
+They seem to regard the wayfaring Britisher as whimsical, that is all.
+
+A train that crawls has this advantage, we can see everything by the
+way, villages, crops, and methods of cultivation. The landscape soon
+changes. The familiar characteristics of the wine country disappear.
+Instead of vine-clad hills, nurseries of young plants grafted on
+American stocks, and vineyard after vineyard in rich maturity, we now
+see hop gardens, colza fields, and wide pastures. Here and there we
+obtain a glimpse of some walled-in farmhouse, recalling the granges of
+our own Isle of Wight.
+
+Alongside the railway runs the canal, that important waterway connecting
+the Seine with the Saone; but the Saone itself, Mr. Hamerton's favourite
+river, is not seen till we reach our destination.
+
+The little town of St. Jean de Losne, although unknown to English
+readers, is one of the most historic of France. No other, indeed, boasts
+of more honourable renown. As Jeanne d'Arc had done just two centuries
+before, St. Jean de Losne saved the country in 1636. When the Imperial
+forces under Galas attempted the occupation of Burgundy, the dauntless
+townsfolk long held the enemy at bay and compelled final retreat. After
+generations profited by this heroism. Until the great year of 1789, the
+town, by royal edict, enjoyed complete immunity from taxation. On the
+outbreak of the Revolution, with true patriotic spirit, the citizens
+surrendered those privileges, of their own free will sharing the public
+burdens.
+
+The first sight that meets the eye on entering St. Jean de Losne is
+the monument erected in commemoration of the siege. "Better late than
+never," is a proverb applicable to public as well as private affairs of
+conscience.
+
+A little farther, and we reach the church of St. Jean. It contains a
+magnificent pulpit, carved from a single block of rich red marble, the
+niches ornamented with charming statuettes of the apostles. Close by is
+the Hotel de Ville, in which are some interesting historic relics. As I
+passed through the courtyard, I saw an odd sight. One might have fancied
+that a second Imperial army threatened a siege, and that the townsfolk
+were laying in stores. The pavement was piled with bread and meat,
+whilst butchers and bakers were busily engaged in dividing these into
+portions, authorities, municipal, military and police, looking on.
+
+I learned that these rations were for the regiments quartered in the
+town during the autumn manoeuvres. Every day such distributions take
+place; in country places the troops have recourse to the peasants, very
+often being treated as guests. A young friend, serving his three years,
+told me that nowhere had he found country folk more hospitable than in
+the Cote d'Or. No sooner did the soldiers make their appearance in a
+village, than forth came the inhabitants to welcome them, officers being
+carried off to chateaux, men by twos and threes to the home of cure or
+small owner. "Not a peasant," he said, "but would bring up a bottle
+of good wine from his cellar, and often after dinner we would get up a
+dance out of doors. On the saddle sometimes from two in the morning till
+twelve at noon, the kind reception and the jollity of the evening made
+up for the hardship and fatigue. We have just had several days of bad
+weather, and had to sleep on straw in barns and outhouses, wherever
+indeed shelter was to be had. Not one of us ever lost heart or temper;
+we remained gay as larks all the time."
+
+An hour's railway journey from St. Jean de Losne takes the traveller to
+Lons-le-Saulnier, beautifully situated at the foot of the Jura range on
+the threshold of wild and romantic scenery.
+
+A decade had not robbed this little town of its old-world look familiar
+to me, but meantime a new Lons-le-Saulnier had sprung up. Since my first
+visit a handsome bathing establishment has been built, with casino,
+concert-room, and all the other essentials of an inland watering-place.
+The waters are especially recommended for skin affections, gout, and
+rheumatism. Formerly the mineral springs of Lons, as the townsfolk
+lazily call the place, were chiefly frequented by residents and near
+neighbours. Improved accommodation, increased accessibility, cheapened
+travel and additional attractions, have changed matters. The season
+opening in May, and lasting till the end of October, is now patronised
+by hundreds of visitors from all parts of eastern France. These health
+resorts are much more sociable than our own. Folks drop alike social,
+political, and religious differences for the time being, and cultivate
+the art of being agreeable as only French people can. Excursions,
+picnics, and pleasure parties are arranged; in the evening the young
+folks dance whilst their elders play a rubber of whist, chat, look on,
+or make marriages. Many a wedding is arranged during the _Saison des
+Bains_, nor can such unions be called _mariages de convenance_, as in
+holiday-time intercourse is comparatively unrestricted. Grown-up or
+growing-up sons and daughters then meet as those on English or American
+soil.
+
+Lons-le-Saulnier possesses little of interest except its Museum, rich
+in modern sculpture, and its quaint arcades, recalling the period of
+Spanish rule in Franche Comte. The excursions lying within easy reach
+are numerous and delightful. Foremost of these is a visit to the
+marvellous rock-shut valley of Baume-les-Messieurs, so called to
+distinguish it from Baume-les-Dames near Besancon. The descent is made
+on foot, and at first sight appears not only perilous but impracticable,
+the zigzag path being cut in almost perpendicular shelves of rock.
+This mountain staircase, or the "Echelle des Baumes," is not to be
+recommended to those afflicted with giddiness. Little sunshine reaches
+the heart of the gorge, yet below the turf is brilliant, a veritable
+islet of green threaded by a tiny river. The natural walls shutting us
+in have a majestic aspect, but playful and musical is the Seille as it
+ripples at our feet. Travellers of an adventuresome turn can explore the
+stalactite caverns and other marvels around; not the least of these is
+a tiny lake, the depth of which has never been sounded. For half-a-mile
+the valley winds towards the straggling village of Baume, and there the
+marvels abruptly end.
+
+Nothing finer in the way of scenery is to be found throughout eastern
+France. In the ancient Abbey Church are two masterpieces, a retable in
+carved wood and a tomb ornamented with exquisite statuettes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+NANCY.
+
+It is a pleasant six hours' journey from Dijon via Chalindrey to Nancy.
+We pass the little village of Gemeaux, in which amongst French friends I
+have spent so many happy days.
+
+From the railway we catch sight of the monticule crowned by an obelisk;
+surmounting the vine-clad slopes, we also obtain a glimpse of its "Ormes
+de Sully," or group of magnificent elms, one of many in France supposed
+to have been planted by the great Sully. Since my first acquaintance
+with this neighbourhood, more than twenty years ago, the aspect of the
+country hereabouts has in no small degree changed. Hop gardens in
+many spots have replaced vineyards, owing to the devastation of the
+phylloxera. It was in the last years of the third Empire that the
+inhabitants of Roquemaure on the Rhone found their vines mysteriously
+withering.
+
+A little later the left bank was attacked, and about the same time the
+famous brandy producing region of Cognac in the Charente showed
+similar symptoms. The cause of the mischief, the terrible Phylloxera
+devastatrix, was brought to light in 1868. This tiny insect is hardly
+visible to the naked eye, yet so formed by Nature as to be a wholesale
+engine of destruction, its phenomenal productiveness being no less fatal
+than its equally phenomenal powers of locomotion. One of these tiny
+parasites alone propagates at the rate of millions of eggs in a season,
+a thousand alone sufficing to destroy two acres and a half of vineyard.
+As formidable as this terrible fertility is the speed of the insect's
+wings or rather sails according extraordinary ease of movement. A gust
+of wind, a mere breath of air, and like a grain of dust or a tuft of
+thistledown, this germ of destruction is borne whither chance directs,
+to the certain ruin of any vineyard on which it lights. The havoc spread
+with terrible rapidity. From every vine-growing region of France arose
+cries of consternation. Within the space of a few years hundreds of
+thousands of acres were hopelessly blighted. In 1878 the invader was
+first noticed at Meursault in Burgundy; a few days later it appeared in
+the Botanical Gardens of Dijon. The cost of replanting vineyards with
+American stocks is so heavy, viz.: twenty pounds per hectare, that even
+many rich vintagers have preferred to cultivate other crops. Some owners
+have sold their lands outright.
+
+On quitting Is-sur-Tille we enter the so-called Plat de Langres, or
+richly cultivated plains stretching between that town and Toul, in the
+Department of the Meurthe and Moselle.
+
+With the almost sudden change of landscape--woods, winding rivers, and
+hayfields in which peasants are getting in their autumn crop, literally
+mauve-tinted from the profusion of autumn crocuses--we encounter
+sharp contrasts, the events of 1870-1 changing the French frontier,
+necessitating the transformation we now behold--once quiet, old-world
+towns now wearing the aspect of a vast camp, everywhere to be seen
+military defences on a wholly inconceivable scale. It is comforting to
+hear from the lips of those who should know, that at the present time
+war is impossible, the engines of warfare being so tremendous that the
+result of a conflict would be simply annihilation on both sides. After
+ten years' absence, and in spite of radical changes, the elegant,
+exquisitely kept town of Nancy appears little altered to me. The ancient
+capital of Lorraine is now one of the largest garrisons on the eastern
+frontier, but the military aspect is not too obtrusive. Except for the
+perpetual roll of the heavy artillery waggons and perpetual sight of the
+red pantalon, we are apt to forget the present position of Nancy from a
+strategic point of view.
+
+Other changes are pleasanter to dwell on. The Facultes, or schools of
+medicine, science, and law, removed hither from Strasburg after the
+annexation, have immensely increased the intellectual status of Nancy,
+whilst from the commercial and industrial side the advance has been
+no less. Its population has doubled since the events of 1870-1, and is
+constantly increasing. Why so few English travellers visit this dainty
+and attractive little capital is not easy to explain. More interesting
+even than the artistic and historic collections of Nancy is the
+celebrated School of Forestry. Formerly a few young Englishmen
+were out-students of this school, but since the study had been made
+accessible at home the foreign element at the time of my visit,
+consisted of a few Roumanians, sent by their Government. The Ecole
+Forestiere, courteously shown to visitors, was founded sixty years ago
+and is conducted on almost a military system. Only twenty-four students
+are received annually, and these must have passed severe examinations
+either at the Ecole Agronomique of Paris, or at the Ecole Polytechnique.
+The staff consists of a director and six professors, all paid by the
+State. Two or three years form the curriculum and successful students
+are sure of obtaining good Government appointments. Forestry being a
+most important service, every branch of natural science connected with
+the preservation of forests, and afforesting is taught, the school
+collections forming a most interesting and wholly unique museum. Here we
+see, exquisitely arranged as books on library shelves, specimens of
+wood of all countries, whilst elsewhere sections from the tiniest to
+the gigantic stems of America. Very instructive, too, are the models of
+those regions in France already afforested, and of those undergoing
+the process; we also see the system by means of which the soil is so
+consolidated as to render plantation possible, namely, the arresting of
+mountain torrents by dams and barrages. In the Dauphine, and French
+Alps generally, many denuded tracks are in course of transformation, the
+expense being partly borne by the State and partly by the communes. It
+is impossible to over-estimate the importance of such works, alike
+from a climatic, economic, and hygienic point of view. The extensive
+eucalyptus plantations in Algeria, teach us the value of afforesting,
+vast tracks having been thereby rendered healthful and cultivable.
+
+A strikingly beautiful city, sad of aspect withal, is this ancient
+capital of Lorraine, ever wearing half mourning, as it seems, for the
+loss of its sister Alsace.
+
+Unforgettable is the glimpse of the Place Stanislas, with its bronze
+gates, fountains, and statue, worthy of a great capital; of the
+beautiful figure of Duke Antonio of Lorraine on horseback, under
+an archway of flamboyant Gothic; of the Ducal Palace and its airy
+colonnade; lastly, of the picturesque old city gate, the Porte de la
+Crafie, one of the most striking monuments of the kind in France.
+
+All these things may be glanced at in an hour, but in order to enjoy
+Nancy thoroughly, a day or two should be devoted to it, and creature
+comforts are to be had in the hotels.
+
+In the Ducal Palace are shown the rich tapestries found in the tent of
+Charles le Temeraire after his defeat before Nancy, and other relics of
+that Haroun-al-Raschid of his epoch, who bivouacked off gold and silver
+plate, and wore on the battle-field diamonds worth half a million. The
+cenotaphs of the Dukes of Lorraine are in a little church outside
+the town--the _chapelle ronde_, as the splendid little mausoleum is
+designated, its imposing monuments of black marble and richly-decorated
+octagonal dome, making up a solemn and beautiful whole. Graceful and
+beautiful also are the monuments in the church itself, and those of
+another church, des Cordeliers, close to the Ducal Palace.
+
+Nancy is especially rich in monumental sculpture, but it is in the
+cathedral that we are enchanted by the marble statues of the four
+doctors of the church--St. Augustine, St. Gregoire, St. Leon, and St.
+Jerome. These are the work of Nicholas Drouin, a native of the town,
+and formerly ornamented a tomb in the church of the Cordeliers just
+mentioned. The physiognomy, expression, and pose of St. Augustine are
+well worthy of a sculptor's closest study, but it is rather as a
+whole than in detail that this exquisite statue delights the ordinary
+observer.
+
+All four sculptures are noble works of art; the beautiful, dignified
+figure of St. Augustine somehow takes strongest hold of the imagination.
+We would fain return to it again and again, as indeed we would fain
+return to all else we have seen in the fascinating city of Nancy.
+
+From Nancy, by way of Epinal, we may easily reach the heart of the
+Vosges.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.
+
+At the railway station of Nancy, I was met by a French family party, my
+hosts to be in a chateau on the other side of the French frontier.
+
+We had jogged on pleasantly enough for about half an hour, when the
+gentlemen of the party, with (to me) perplexing smiles, briskly folded
+their newspapers and consigned them, not to their pockets or rugs, but
+to their ladies, by whom the journals were secreted in underskirts.
+
+"We are approaching the frontier," said Madame to me.
+
+I afterwards learned that only one or two French newspapers are allowed
+to circulate in the annexed provinces, the _Temps_ and others, the
+names of which I forget; for the first and second offence of smuggling
+prohibited newspapers, the offender is subjected to a reprimand, the
+third offence is punished by a fine, the fourth involves imprisonment.
+Now, as all of us know who have lived in France, the _Figaro_ is a
+veritable necessity to the better-off classes in France, the _Times_ to
+John Bull not more so. Similarly, to the peasant and the artisan, the
+_Petit Journal_ takes the place of the half-penny newspaper in England.
+This deprivation is cruelly felt, and is part of the system introduced
+by William II.
+
+Custom-house dues are at all times vexatious, but on the French-Prussian
+frontier they are so arranged as to provoke patriotic feeling. It may
+seem a foolish fancy for French folks, German subjects of the Kaiser,
+to prefer French soap and stationery, yet what more natural than the
+purchase of such things when within easy reach? Thus, on alighting at
+the frontier, not only were trunks and baskets turned out, we were
+all eyed from head to foot suspiciously. My hosts' newspapers were
+not unearthed, certainly; perhaps their rank and position counted for
+something. But one country girl had to pay duty on a shilling box of
+writing paper, another was mulcted to half the value of a bottle of
+scent, and so on. There was something really pathetic in the forced
+display of these trifles, the purchasers being working people and
+peasants. All French goods and productions are exorbitantly taxed. Thus
+a lady must pay three or four shillings duty on a bonnet perhaps costing
+twenty in France. On a cask of wine, the duty often exceeds the price of
+its contents, and, according to an inexorable law of human nature, the
+more inaccessible are these patriotic luxuries, so the more persistently
+will they be coveted and indulged in.
+
+Custom House officials on the Prussian side have no easy time of it,
+ladies especially giving them no little trouble. The duty on a new dress
+sent or brought from France across the frontier is ten francs; and
+we were told an amusing story of a French lady, who thought to neatly
+circumvent the douane. She was going from Nancy to Strasburg to a
+wedding, and in the ladies' waiting-room on the French side changed her
+dress, putting on the new, a rich costume bought for the ceremony.
+The officials got wind of the matter. The dress was seized and finally
+redeemed after damages of a thousand francs!
+
+Persons in indifferent circumstances, however patriotic they may be, can
+subsist upon German beer, soap, and writing paper. The blood tax, upon
+which I shall say something further on, is a wholly different matter.
+
+A short drive brought us to a noble chateau, inside a beautifully wooded
+park, the iron gateway showing armorial bearings. Indoors there
+was nothing to remind me that I had exchanged Republican France for
+autocratic Prussia. Guests, servants, speech, usages, books, were
+French, or, in the case of the three latter, English. Every member of
+the family spoke English, afternoon tea was served as at home, and the
+latest Tauchnitz volumes lay on the table.
+
+Difficult indeed it seemed to realise that I had crossed the frontier,
+that though within easy reach, almost in sight of it, the miss, alas!
+Was as good as a mile.
+
+Alsace-Lorraine, I may here mention, is a verbal annexation dating
+from 1871. Whilst Alsace was German until its conquest by Louis XIV.,
+Lorraine, the country of Jeanne d'Arc, had been in part French and
+French-speaking for centuries. Alsace under French _regime_ retained
+alike Protestantism and Teutonic speech. We can easily understand that
+the changes of 1871 should come much harder to the Catholic Lorrainers
+than to their Protestant Alsatian neighbours.
+
+Bitterness of feeling does not seem to me to diminish with time. On the
+occasion of my third visit to Germanised France, I found things much
+the same, the clinging to France ineradicable as ever, nothing like the
+faintest sign of reconciliation with Imperial rule.
+
+One might suppose that, after a generation, some slight approach to
+intercourse would exist among the French and Prussian populations. By
+the upper classes the Germans, no matter what their rank or position,
+remain tabooed as were Jews in the Ghetto of former days.
+
+At luncheon next day, my host smilingly informed me that he had filled
+up the paper left by the commissary of police, concerning their newly
+arrived English visitor. We are here, it must be remembered, in a
+perpetual state of siege.
+
+"I put down Canterbury as your birthplace--" he began.
+
+"Good Heavens!" exclaimed I, "I was born near Ipswich."
+
+"Oh!" he said, smiling, "I just put down the first name that occurred to
+me, and filled in particulars as to age, etc.," here he bowed, "after a
+fashion which I felt would be satisfactory to yourself."
+
+This kind of domiciliary visit may appear a joking matter, but to live
+under a state of siege is no subject for pleasantry, as I shall show
+further on. Here is another instance of the comic side of annexation, if
+the adjective could be applied to such a subject. In the salon I noticed
+a sofa cushion, covered, as I thought to my astonishment, with the
+Prussian flag. But my hostess smilingly informed me that, as the
+Tricolour was forbidden in Germanised Lorraine, by way of having the
+next best thing to it, she had used the Russian colours, symbol of the
+new ally of France.
+
+Another vexation of unfortunate _annexes_ is in the matter of
+bookbinding. French people naturally like to have their books bound in
+French style, but it is next to impossible to get this done in Alsace.
+If the books are bound in France, there is the extra cost of carriage
+and duty.
+
+A very pleasant time I had under this French roof on German soil. Our
+days were spent in walks and drives, our evenings entertained with music
+and declamation. Now we had the Kreutzer Sonata exquisitely performed by
+amateur musicians, now we listened to selections from Lamartine, Nadaud,
+Victor Hugo and others, as admirably rendered by a member of this
+accomplished family, all the members of which were now gathered
+together. I saw something alike of their poorer and richer neighbours,
+all of course being their country-people. This social circle, including
+the household staff, was rigorously French.
+
+Let me now describe a Lorraine lunch, as the French _gouter_ or
+afternoon collation is universally called, our hosts being a family of
+peasant farmers, their guests the house party from the chateau. We had
+only to drive a mile or two before quitting annexed France for France
+proper, the respective frontiers indicated by tall posts bearing the
+name and eagle of the German Empire and the R.F. of France.
+
+"You are now on French soil," said my host to me with a smile of
+satisfaction, and the very horses seemed to realise the welcome fact.
+Right merrily they trotted along, joyfully sniffing the air of home.
+
+The Lorraine villages are very unlike their spick and span neighbours of
+Alsace, visited by me two years before. Why Catholic villages should be
+dirty and Protestant ones clean, I will not attempt to explain. Such,
+however, is the case. As we drove through the line of dung-heaps and
+liquid manure rising above what looked like barns, I was ill-prepared
+for the comfort and tidiness prevailing within. What a change when the
+door opened, and our neatly dressed entertainers ushered us into their
+dining-room! Here, looking on to a well-kept garden was a table spread
+with spotless linen, covers being laid as in a middle-class house.
+An armchair, invariable token of respect, was placed for the English
+visitor; then we sat down to table, two blue-bloused men, uncle and
+nephew, and three elderly women in mob caps and grey print gowns,
+dispensing hospitality to their guests, belonging to the _noblesse_
+of Lorraine. There was no show of subservience on the one part, or of
+condescension on the other. Conversation flowed easily and gaily as at
+the chateau itself.
+
+I here add that whilst the French _noblesse_ and _bourgeoisie_ remain
+apart as before the Revolution, with the peasant folk it is not so.
+These good people were not tenants or in any way dependents on my
+hosts. They were simply humble friends, the great tie being that of
+nationality. The order of the feast was peculiar. Being Friday no
+delicacy in the shape of a raised game pie could be offered; we
+were, therefore, first of all served with bread and butter and _vin
+ordinaire_. Then a dish of fresh honey in the comb was brought out;
+next, a huge open plum tart. When the tart had disappeared, cakes
+of various kinds and a bottle of good Bordeaux were served; finally,
+grapes, peaches, and pears with choice liqueurs. Healths were drunk,
+glasses chinked, and when at last the long lunch came to an end, we
+visited dairy, bedrooms, and garden, all patterns of neatness. This
+family of small peasant owners is typical of the very best rural
+population in France. The united capital of the group--uncle, aunts and
+nephew--would not perhaps exceed a few thousand pounds, but the land
+descending from generation to generation had increased in value owing to
+improved cultivation. Hops form the most important crop hereabouts. This
+village of French Lorraine testified to the educational liberality of
+the Republic. For the three hundred and odd souls the Government here
+provides schoolmaster, schoolmistress, and a second female teacher for
+the infant school, their salaries being double those paid under the
+Empire.
+
+Now a word concerning the blood-tax. Rich and well-to-do French
+residents in the annexed provinces can afford to send their sons across
+the frontier and pay the heavy fines imposed for default. With the
+artisan and peasant the case is otherwise. Here defection from military
+service means not only lifelong separation but worldly ruin. To the
+wealthy an occasional sight of their young soldiers in France is an easy
+matter. A poor man must stay at home. If his sons quit Alsace-Lorraine
+in order to go through their military service on French soil, they
+cannot return until they have attained their forty-fifth year, and the
+penalty of default is so high that it means, and is intended to mean,
+ruin. There is also another crying evil of the system. French conscripts
+forced into the German Army are always sent as far as possible from
+home. If they fall ill and die, kith or kin can seldom reach them.
+Again, as French is persistently spoken in the home, and German only
+learnt under protest at the primary school, the young _annexe_ enters
+upon his enforced military service with an imperfect knowledge of the
+latter language, the hardships of his position being thereby immensely
+enhanced. No one here hinted to me of any especial severity being shown
+to French conscripts on this account, but we can easily understand the
+disadvantage under which they labour. I visited a tenant farmer on the
+other side of the frontier, whose only son had lately died in hospital
+at Berlin. The poor father was telegraphed for but arrived too late, the
+blow saddening for ever an honest and laborious life. This farmer was
+well-to-do, but had other children. How then could he pay the fine
+imposed upon the defaulter? And, of course, French service involved
+lifelong separation. Cruel, indeed, is the dilemma of the unfortunate
+_annexe_. But the blood-tax is felt in other ways. During my third stay
+in Germanised Lorraine the autumn manoeuvres were taking place. This
+means that alike rich and poor are compelled to lodge and cook for
+as many soldiers as the authorities choose to impose upon them. I was
+assured by a resident that poor people often bid the worn-out men to
+their humble board, the conscripts' fare being regulated according to
+the strictest economy. In rich houses, German officers receive similar
+hospitality, but we can easily understand under what conditions.
+
+The annexed provinces are of course being Germanised by force.
+Immigration continues at a heavy cost. Here is an instance in point.
+
+When Alsace was handed over to the German Government it boasted of
+absolute solvency. It is now burdened with debt, owing, among many other
+reasons, to the high salaries received by the more important German
+officials; the explanation of this being that the position of these
+functionaries is so unpleasant they have to be bribed into such
+expatriation. Thus their salaries are double what they were under
+French rule. Not that friction often occurs between the German
+civil authorities and French subjects; everyone bears witness to the
+politeness of the former, but it is impossible for them not to feel the
+distastefulness of their own presence. On the other hand, the perpetual
+state of siege is a grievance daily felt. Free speech, liberty of the
+press, rights of public meeting, are unknown. Not long since, a peasant
+just crossed the frontier, and as he touched French soil, shouted "Vive
+la France!" On his return he was convicted of _lese majeste_ and sent
+to prison. Another story points to the same moral. At a meeting of a
+village council an aged peasant farmer, who cried "We are not subjects
+but servants of William II." Was imprisoned for six weeks. The occasion
+that called forth the protest was an enforced levy for some public
+works of no advantage whatever to the inhabitants. Sad indeed is the
+retrospect, sadder still the looking forward, with which we quit French
+friends in the portions of territory now known as Alsace-Lorraine.
+And when we say "Adieu" the word has additional meaning. Epistolary
+intercourse, no more than table-talk, is sacred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+IN GERMANISED ALSACE.
+
+Who would quit Alsace without a pilgrimage to Saverne and the country
+home in which Edmond About wrote his most delightful pages and in which
+he dispensed such princely hospitality? The author of "Le Fellah " was
+forced to forsake his beloved retreat after the events of 1870-1; the
+experiences of this awful time are given in his volume "Alsace," and
+dedicated to his son--_pour qu'il se souvienne_--in order that he might
+remember. Here also as under that Lorraine roof I felt myself in France.
+At the time of my visit the property was for sale. French people,
+however, are loth to purchase estates in the country they may be said
+to inhabit on sufferance, while rich Germans prefer to build palatial
+villas within the triple fortifications and thirteen newly constructed
+forts which are supposed to render Strasburg impregnable.
+
+The railway takes us from Strasburg in an hour to the picturesque old
+town of Saverne, beautifully placed above the Zorn. Turning our backs
+upon the one long street winding upwards to the chateau, we follow a
+road leading into the farthermost recesses of the valley, from which
+rise on either side the wooded spurs of the lower Vosges. Here in
+a natural _cul-de-sac_, wedged in between pine-clad slopes, is as
+delightful a retreat as genius or a literary worker could desire. On the
+superb September day of my visit the place looked its best, and warm
+was the welcome we received from the occupiers, a cultivated and
+distinguished French Protestant family, formerly living at Srasburg, but
+since the events of 1870-1 removed to Nancy. They hired this beautiful
+place from year to year, merely spending a few weeks here during the
+Long Vacation. The intellectual atmosphere still recalled bygone days,
+when Edmond About used to gather round him literary brethren, alike
+French and foreign. Pleasant it was to find here English-speaking,
+England-loving, French people. Nothing can be simpler than the house
+itself, in spite of its somewhat pretentious tower of which About wrote
+so fondly. His study is a small, low-pitched room, not too well lighted,
+but having a lovely outlook; beyond, the long, narrow gardens, fruit,
+flower and vegetable, one leading out of another, rising pine woods and
+the lofty peaks of the Vosges. So remote is this spot that wild deer
+venture into the gardens, whilst squirrels make themselves at home
+close to the house doors. Our host gave me much information about the
+peasants. Although not nearly so prosperous as before the annexation,
+they are doing fairly well. Some, indeed, are well off, possessing
+capital to the amount of several thousand pounds, whilst a millionaire,
+that is, the possessor of a million francs or forty thousand pounds, is
+found here and there. The severance from France entailed, however, one
+enormous loss on the farmer. This was the withdrawal of tobacco culture,
+a monopoly of the French State which afforded maximum profits to the
+cultivator. With regard to the indebtedness of the peasant-owner, my
+informant said that it certainly existed, but not to any great extent,
+usury having been prohibited by the local Reichstag a few years before.
+Again I found myself among French surroundings, French traditions,
+French speech. Let me add, however, that I heard none of the passionate
+regrets, recriminations, and wishes that had constantly fallen on my
+ears ten years before. One prayer, and one only, seems in every heart,
+on every lip, "Peace, peace--only let us have peace!" It must be borne
+in mind that 20,000 French Alsatians quitted Strasburg alone, and that
+those of the better classes who were unable to emigrate sent their young
+sons across the frontier before the age of seventeen. Thus, by a gradual
+process, the French element is being eliminated from the towns, whilst
+in the country annexation came in a very different guise.
+
+This will be seen from the account of another excursion made with French
+friends living in Strasburg.
+
+It is a beautiful drive to Blaesheim, southwest of the city, in a direct
+line with the Vosges and Oberlin's country. We pass the enormous public
+slaughterhouses and interminable lines of brand-new barracks, then under
+one of the twelve stone gates with double portals that now protect the
+city, leaving behind us the tremendous earthworks and powder magazines,
+and are soon in the open plain. This vast plain is fertile and well
+cultivated. On either side we see narrow, ribbon-like strips of maize,
+potatoes, clover, hops, beetroot, and hemp. There are no apparent
+boundaries of the various properties and no trees or houses to break
+the uniformity. The farm-houses and premises, as in the Pyrenees, are
+grouped together, forming the prettiest, neatest villages imaginable.
+Entzheim is one of these. The broad, clean street, the large
+white-washed timber houses, with projecting porches and roofs, may stand
+for a type of the Alsatian "Dorf." The houses are white-washed outside
+once a year, the mahogany-coloured rafters, placed crosswise, forming
+effective ornamentation. No manure heaps before the door are seen
+here, as in Brittany, all is clean and sightly. We meet numbers of
+pedestrians, the women mostly wearing the Alsatian head-dress, an
+enormous bow of broad black ribbon with long ends, worn fan-like on
+the head, and lending an air of great severity. The remainder of the
+costume--short blue or red skirt (the colours distinguishing Protestant
+and Catholic), gay kerchief, and apron--have all but vanished. As
+we approach our destination the outlines of the Vosges become more
+distinct, and the plain is broken by sloping vineyards and fir woods.
+We see no labourers afield, and, with one exception, no cattle. It is
+strange how often cattle are cooped up in pastoral regions. The farming
+here is on the old plan, and milch cows are stabled from January to
+December, only being taken out to water. Agricultural machinery and new
+methods are penetrating these villages at a snail's pace. The division
+of property is excessive. There are no lease-holds, and every farmer,
+alike on a small or large scale, is an owner.
+
+Two classes in Alsace have been partly won over to the German rule; one
+is that of the Protestant clergy, the other that of the peasants.
+
+The Third Empire persistently snubbed its Protestant subjects, then,
+as at the time of the Revocation, numbering many most distinguished
+citizens. No attempts, moreover, were made to Gallicise the
+German-speaking population of the Rhine provinces. Thus the wrench was
+much less felt here than in Catholic, French-speaking Lorraine. Higher
+stipends, good dwelling-houses and schools, have done much to soften
+annexation to the clergy. An afternoon "at home" in a country parsonage
+a few miles from Strasburg, reminded me of similar functions in an
+English rectory.
+
+At the parsonage of Blaesheim we were warmly welcomed by friends, and
+in their pretty garden found a group of ladies and gentlemen playing at
+croquet, among them two nice-looking girls wearing the Alsatian _coiffe_
+that enormous construction of black ribbon just mentioned. These young
+ladies were daughters of the village mayor, a rich peasant, and had been
+educated in Switzerland, speaking French correctly and fluently. Many
+daughters of wealthy peasants marry civilians at Strasburg, when they
+for once and for all cast off the last feature of traditional costume.
+After a little chat, and being bidden to return to tea in half an hour,
+we visited some other old acquaintances of my friends, a worthy peasant
+family residing close by. Here also a surprise was in store for me. The
+head of the house and his wife--both far advanced in the sixties and
+who might have walked out of one of Erckman-Chatrian's novels--could not
+speak a word of French, although throughout the best part of their lives
+they had been French subjects!
+
+Admirable types they were, but by no means given to sentiment or
+romance. The good man assured me in his quaint patois that he did not
+mind whether he was French, German, or, for the matter of that, English,
+so long as he could get along comfortably and peacefully! He added,
+however, that under the former _regime_ taxes had been much lower and
+farming much more profitable. The good folk brought out bread and wine,
+and we toasted each other in right hearty fashion. Over the sideboard
+of their clean, well-furnished sitting room hung a small photograph of
+William II. On our return to our first host we found a sumptuous five
+o'clock tea prepared for the ladies, whilst more solid refreshments
+awaited the gentlemen in the garden.
+
+Even in a remote corner of Alsace, memorialized by Germany's greatest
+poet, we find pathetic clinging to France.
+
+Everyone has read the story of Goethe and Frederika, how the great poet,
+then a student at the Strasburg University, was taken by a comrade to
+the simple parsonage of Sesenheim, how the artless daughter of the house
+with her sweet Alsatian songs, enchanted the brilliant youth, how he
+found himself, as he tells us in his autobiography, suddenly in the
+immortal family of the Vicar of Wakefield. "And here comes Moses too!"
+cried Goethe, as Frederika's brother appeared. That accidental visit has
+in turn immortalised Sesenheim. The place breathes of Frederika. It has
+become a shrine dedicated to pure, girlish love.
+
+A new line of railway takes us from Strasburg in about an hour over the
+flat, monotonous stretch of country, so slowly crossed by diligence in
+Goethe's time. The appearance of the city from this side--the French
+side--is truly awful: we see fortification after fortification, with
+vast powder magazines at intervals, on the outer earthworks bristling
+rows of cannon, beyond, several of the thirteen forts constructed since
+the war. The bright greenery of the turf covering these earthworks does
+not detract from their dreadful appearance. Past the vast workshops
+and stores of the railway station--a small town in itself--past market
+gardens, hop gardens, hayfields, beech-woods, all drenched with a
+week of rain, past old-world villages, the railway runs to Sesenheim,
+alongside the high road familiar to Goethe. We alight at the neat,
+clean, trim station (in the matter of cleanliness the new _regime_ bears
+the palm over the old), and take the flooded road to the village. An
+old, bent, wrinkled peasant woman, speaking French, directs us for full
+information about Frederique--thus is the name written in French--to the
+auberge. First, with no little interest and pride, she unhooks from
+her own wall a framed picture, containing portraits of Goethe, and
+Frederika, and drawings of church and parsonage as they were. The former
+has been restored and the latter wholly rebuilt.
+
+As we make our way to the little inn over against these, we pass a
+new handsome communal school in course of erection. On questioning two
+children in French, they shake their heads and pass on. The thought
+naturally arises--did the various French Governments, throughout the
+period of a hundred and odd years ending in 1870, do much in the way of
+assimilating the German population of Alsace?
+
+It would not seem so, seeing that up till the Franco-Prussian war the
+country folk retained their German speech, or at least patois. Under
+the present rule only German is taught in communal schools, and in
+the gymnasiums or lycees, two hours a week only being allowed for the
+teaching of French. At the Auberge du Bouf, over against the church and
+parsonage, we chat with the master in French about Goethe and Frederika;
+his womankind, however, only spoke patois. Here, nevertheless, we find
+French hearts, French sympathies, and occasionally French gaiety.
+
+Unidyllic, yet full of instruction, is the drive in the opposite
+direction to Kehl. We are here approaching friendly frontiers, yet the
+aspect is hardly less dreadful. True that cannon do not bristle on the
+outer line of the triple fortifications; otherwise the state of things
+is similar. We see lines of vast powder magazines, enormous barracks
+of recent construction, preparations for defence, on a scale altogether
+inconceivable and indescribable. Little wonder that meat is a shilling
+a pound, instead of fourpence as before the annexation, that bread has
+doubled in price, taxation also, and, to make matters worse, that trade
+has remained persistently dull!
+
+A tremendous triple-arched, stone gate, guarded by sentinels, has been
+erected on this side of the lower Rhine, over against the Duchy of
+Baden. No sooner are we through than our hearts are rejoiced with signs
+of peace and innocent enjoyment, restaurants and coffee gardens, family
+groups resting under the trees. Beyond, flowing briskly amid wooded
+banks to right and left, is the Rhine, a glorious sight, compensating
+for so many that have just given us the heartache.
+
+Of Strasburg I will say little. Full descriptions of the new city, for
+such an expression is no figure of speech, are given in the English,
+French, and German guide books. The first care of the German Government
+after coming into possession was to repair the havoc caused by the
+bombardment, the rebuilding of public buildings, monuments and streets
+that had been partially or entirely destroyed in 1871. Among these were
+the Museum and Public Library, the Protestant church, several orphanages
+and hospitals, lastly, incredible as it may seem, the beautiful
+octagonal tower of the Cathedral. The incidents of this vandalism have
+just been graphically described in the new volume of the brothers'
+Margueritte prose epic, dealing with the Franco-Prussian War, entitled
+"Les Braves Gens."
+
+I remember writing on the occasion of my first visit to Strasburg, a few
+years after these events--"There is very little to see at Strasburg now.
+The Library with its priceless treasures of books and manuscripts, the
+Museum of painting and sculpture, rich in _chefs d'oeuvre_ of the French
+school, the handsome Protestant church, the theatre, the Palais de
+Justice, were all completely destroyed by the Prussian bombardment,
+not to speak of buildings of lesser importance, four hundred private
+dwellings, and hundreds of civilians killed and wounded by the shells.
+Nor was the cathedral spared, and would doubtless have perished
+altogether also but for the enforced surrender of the heroic city."
+
+Since that sad time a new Strasburg has sprung up, of which the
+University is the central feature. A thousand students now frequent this
+great school of learning, the professorial staff numbering a hundred.
+One noteworthy point is the excessive cheapness of a learned or
+scientific education. Autocratic Prussia emulates democratic France.
+I was assured by an Alsatian who had graduated here that a year's fees
+need not exceed ten pounds! Students board and lodge themselves outside
+the University, and, of course, as economically as they please. They
+consist chiefly of Germans, for sons of French parents of the middle and
+upper ranks are sent over the frontier before the age of seventeen in
+order to evade the German military service. They thus exile themselves
+for ever. This cruel severance of family ties is, as I have said, one
+of the saddest effects of annexation. Without and within, the group
+of buildings forming the University is of great splendour. Alike
+architecture and decoration are on a costly scale; the vast corridors
+with tesselated marble floors, marble columns, domes covered with
+frescoes, statuary, stained glass, and gilded panels, must impress the
+mind of the poorer students. Less agreeable is the reflection of the
+taxpayer. This new Imperial quarter represents millions of marks, whilst
+the defences of Strasburg alone represent many millions more. One of
+the five facultes is devoted to Natural Science. The Museum of Natural
+History, the mineralogical collections, and the chemical laboratories
+have each their separate building, whilst at the extreme end of the
+University gardens is the handsome new observatory, with covered way
+leading to the equally handsome residence of the astronomer in charge.
+Thus the learned star-gazer can reach his telescope under cover in
+wintry weather. In addition to the University library described above,
+the various class-rooms have each small separate libraries, sections
+of history, literature, etc., on which the students can immediately lay
+their hands. All the buildings are heated with gas or water.
+
+Just beyond these precincts we come upon a striking contrast--row after
+row of brand-new barracks, military bakeries, foundries, and stores;
+piles of cannon balls, powder magazines, war material, one would
+think, sufficient to blow up all Europe. Incongruous indeed is
+this juxtaposition of a noble seat of learning and militarism only
+commensurate with barbaric times. A good way off is the School of
+Medicine. This, indeed, owes little or nothing to the new regime, having
+been founded by the French Government long before 1870. It is a vast
+group of buildings, one of which can only be glanced at with a shudder.
+My friend pointed out to me an annexe or "vivisection department." Here,
+as he expressed it, is maintained quite a menagerie of unhappy animals
+destined for the tortures of the vivisector's knife. The very thought
+sickened me, and I was glad to give up sight-seeing and drop in for
+half-an-hour's chat with a charming old lady, French to the backbone,
+living under the mighty shadow of the Cathedral. She entertained me with
+her experiences during the bombardment, when cooped up with a hundred
+persons, rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, all passing fifteen days in a
+dark, damp cellar. Many horrible stories she related, but somehow
+they seemed less horrible than the thought of tame, timid, and even
+affectionate and intelligent creatures, slowly and deliberately tortured
+to death, for the sake, forsooth, of what? Of this corporeal frame
+man himself has done his best to vitiate and dishonour, mere clayey
+envelope--so theologians tell us--of an immortal soul!
+
+Strasburg, like Metz, is one vast camp, at the time of this second
+visit the forty thousand soldiers in garrison here were away for the
+manoeuvres. In another week or two the town would swarm with them.
+
+I will now say a few words about the administration of the annexed
+provinces, a subject on which exists much misapprehension.
+
+As I have explained, no liberty, as we understand it, exists for the
+French subjects of the German Emperor, neither freedom of speech, nor of
+the press, nor of public meeting are enjoyed in Alsace and the portion
+of Lorraine no longer French. A rigorous censorship of books as well
+as newspapers is carried on. Even religious worship is under perpetual
+surveillance. One by one French pastors and priests are supplanted
+by their German brethren. A much respected pastor of Mulhouse, long
+resident in that city and ardently French, told me some years ago that
+he expected to be the last of his countrymen permitted to officiate.
+Police officers wearing plain clothes attend the churches in which
+French is still permitted on Sunday. There is nothing that can be called
+representative or real parliamentary government. The Stadtholder or
+Governor is in reality a dictator armed with autocratic powers. He
+can, at a moment's notice, expel citizens, or stop newspapers. As to
+administration, it rests in the hands of the State Secretariat or body
+of Ministers, three in number. There is a pretence at home rule, but
+one fact suffices to explain its character and working. Of the thirty
+members forming the local Reichstag, sitting at Strasburg, fifteen are
+always named by the Stadtholder himself. This little Chamber of Deputies
+deliberates upon provincial affairs, all Bills having to pass the
+Chamber at Berlin and receive the Imperial sanction before becoming law.
+As to the party of protest in the Reichstag itself, formerly headed by
+the late Jean Dollfuss, I was assured that it had ceased to exist.
+Years before, then burdened with the weight of care and years, the great
+patriot of Mulhouse had said to me, "I no longer take my seat at Berlin.
+Of what good?" And were he living still, that great and good man,
+burning as was his patriotism, inextinguishable as was his love for
+France, would doubtless echo the words I now heard on every lip, "Peace,
+peace; only let us have peace!"
+
+Whilst at Strasburg German has crowded out French, at Mulhouse I found
+French still universally spoken. The prohibition of native speech in
+schools is not only a domestic but a commercial grievance. As extensive
+business relations exist between the two countries, especially near the
+frontier, a knowledge of both French and German is really necessary
+to all classes. Even tourists in Alsace-Lorraine nowadays fare badly
+without some smattering of the latter language. Hotel-keepers especially
+look to the winning side, and do their very utmost to Germanise their
+establishments. Shopkeepers must live, and find it not only advantageous
+but necessary to follow the same course. Sad indeed is the spectacle
+of Germanised France! Nemesis here faces us in militarism, crushing
+the people with taxation and profoundly shocking the best instincts of
+humanity.
+
+In conclusion I must do justice to the extreme courtesy of German
+railway and other officials. Many employes of railways and post
+offices--all, be it remembered, Government officials--do not speak any
+French at all, especially in out-of-the-way places. At the same time,
+all officials, down to the rural postman, will do their very best to
+help out French-speaking strangers with their own scant vocabulary of
+French words.
+
+My Alsatian hosts, one and all, I found quite ready to do justice to
+the authorities and their representatives, but, as I have insisted
+upon before, an insuperable barrier, the fathomless gulf created by
+injustice, exists between conquerors and conquered. And only last year
+dining with my hosts of Germanised Lorraine in Paris, I asked them if in
+this respect matters had changed for the better. The answer I received
+was categoric--"Nothing is changed since your visit to us. French and
+Germans remain apart as before."
+
+"East of Paris" has led me somewhat farther than I intended, but to
+a lover of France, no less than to a French heart, France beyond the
+Vosges is France still!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
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+ <title>
+ East of Paris, by Miss Betham-edwards
+ </title>
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+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: East of Paris
+ Sketches in the Gâtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne
+
+Author: Matilda Betham-Edwards
+
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8734]
+This file was first posted on August 5, 2003
+Last Updated: November 1, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST OF PARIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Carlo Traverso, Debra Storr, Sandra Brown,
+Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ EAST OF PARIS
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ SKETCHES IN THE GÂTINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Miss Betham-Edwards
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> INTRODUCTORY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> EAST OF PARIS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. &mdash; MELUN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. &mdash; MORET-SUR-LOING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. &mdash; BOURRON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued</i>.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued.</i>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. &mdash; LARCHANT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. &mdash; RECLOSES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; NEMOURS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. &mdash; LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. &mdash; POUGUES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. &mdash; NEVERS AND MOULINS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. &mdash; SOUVIGNY AND SENS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. &mdash; RHEIMS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; RHEIMS&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; ST. JEAN DE LOSNE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; NANCY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. &mdash; IN GERMANISED LORRAINE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; IN GERMANISED ALSACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTORY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern
+ France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French
+ travel, no more than the <i>chefs-d&rsquo;oeuvre</i> of French literature, are
+ unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing
+ the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of
+ Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as a
+ wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their
+ seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from &ldquo;Notre Dame de
+ Paris&rdquo; or &ldquo;Le Père Goriot,&rdquo; to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so the
+ sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of
+ Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after
+ the thundering Rhône. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes as
+ we pic-nic on the Puy de Dôme. More fondly still my memory clings to many
+ a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its vine-clad
+ hills or of Autun as approached from Pré Charmoy, to me, the so familiar
+ home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however, the natural marvels
+ of France, like those of any other country, can be catalogued, French
+ scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so, having visited,
+ re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon on the European
+ map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a veritable <i>embarras
+ de richesses</i>. And many of the spots here described will, I have no
+ doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to myself&mdash;<i>Larchant</i>
+ with its noble tower rising from the plain, recalling the still nobler
+ ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the Sahara&mdash;<i>Recloses</i> with
+ its pictorial interiors and grand promontory overlooking a panorama of
+ forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked by a single sail&mdash;<i>Moret</i>
+ with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows which of the two being the more
+ attractive&mdash;<i>Nemours</i>, favourite haunt of Balzac, memoralized in
+ &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo;&mdash;<i>La Charité</i>, from whose old-world dwellings
+ you may throw pebbles into the broad blue Loire&mdash;<i>Pougues</i>, the
+ prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented by Mme. de Sévigné and
+ valetudinarians of the Valois race generations before her time&mdash;<i>Souvigny</i>,
+ cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast congeries of abbatial ruins&mdash;<i>Arcis-sur-Aube</i>,
+ the sweet riverside home of Danton&mdash;its near neighbour, <i>Bar-sur-Aube</i>,
+ connected with a bitterer enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great
+ revolutionary himself, the infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace.
+ These are a few of the sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I
+ have returned again and again, ever finding &ldquo;harbour and good company.&rdquo;
+ And these journeys, I should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once
+ more to that sad yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French,
+ to hearts as devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed
+ provinces twenty years ago!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ EAST OF PARIS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. &mdash; MELUN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Scores upon scores of times had I steamed past Melun in the Dijon express,
+ ever eyeing the place wistfully, ever too hurried, perhaps too lazy, to
+ make a halt. Not until September last did I carry out a long cherished
+ intention. It is unpardonable to pass and re-pass any French town without
+ alighting for at least an hour&rsquo;s stroll!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melun, capital of the ancient Gatinais, now chef-lieu of the Department of
+ Seine and Marne, well deserves a visit. Pretty as Melun looks from the
+ railway it is prettier still on nearer approach. The Seine here makes a
+ loop, twice curling round the town with loving embrace, its walls and old
+ world houses to-day mirrored in the crystal-clear river. Like every other
+ French town, small or great, Melun possesses its outer ring of shady
+ walks, boulevards lying beyond the river-side quarters. The place has a
+ busy, prosperous, almost metropolitan look, after the village just left.
+ {Footnote: For symmetry&rsquo;s sake I begin these records at Melun, although I
+ halted at the place on my way from my third sojourn at Bourron.} The big,
+ bustling Hotel du Grand Monarque too, with its brisk, obliging landlady,
+ invited a stay. Dr. Johnson, perhaps the wittiest if the completest John
+ Bull who ever lived, was not far wrong when he glorified the inn. &ldquo;Nothing
+ contrived by man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;has produced so much happiness (relaxation
+ were surely the better word?) as a good tavern.&rdquo; Do we not all, to quote
+ Falstaff, &ldquo;take our ease at our inn,&rdquo; under its roof throwing off daily
+ cares, assuming a holiday mood?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A survey of the yard awoke another train of reflections. It really seems
+ as if the invention of the motor car were bringing back ante-railway days
+ for the tourist and the travelling world, recalling family coach and
+ post-chaise. The place was crowded with motor cars of all shapes and
+ sizes, some of these were plain, shabby gigs and carts of commercial
+ travellers, others, landaus, waggonettes and victorias of rich folks
+ seeing the world in their own carriage as their ancestors had done
+ generations before; one turn-out suggested royalty or a Rothschild, I was
+ about to say, rather I should name a Chicago store-keeper, since American
+ millionaires are the Haroun-el-Raschids of the twentieth century. This
+ last was a sumptuously fitted up carriage having a seat behind for
+ servants, accommodating eight persons in all. There was also a huge box
+ for luggage. It would be interesting to know how much petroleum,
+ electricity, or alcohol such a vehicle would consume in a day. The
+ manufacture of motor cars must be a very flourishing business in France,
+ next, I should say, to that of bicycles. Of these also there was a goodly
+ supply in the entrance hall of the inn, and the impetus given to travel by
+ both motor car and bicycle was here self-evident. The Hotel du Grand
+ Monarque literally swarmed with tourists, one and all French folks taking
+ their ease at their inn. And our neighbours do not take their pleasure
+ solemnly after the manner of the less impressionable English. Stay-at-home
+ as they have hitherto been, home-loving as they essentially are, the
+ atmosphere of an inn, the aroma of a holiday, fill the Frenchman&rsquo;s cup of
+ hilarity to overflowing, rendering gayer the gayest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invention and rapidly spreading use of the motor car in France shows
+ the French character under its revolutionary aspect, yet no people on the
+ face of the earth are in many respects so conservative. We English folks
+ want a new &ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; for social purposes every year, the majority of
+ our friends and acquaintances changing their houses almost as often as
+ milliners and tailors change the fashion in bonnets and coats. A single
+ address book for France supplies a life-time. The explanation is obvious.
+ For the most part we live in other folks&rsquo; houses whilst French folks, the
+ military and official world excepted, occupy their own. Revisit provincial
+ gentry or well-to-do bourgeoisie after an interval of a quarter of a
+ century, you always find them where they were. Interiors show no more
+ change than the pyramids of Egypt. Not so much as sixpence has been laid
+ out upon new carpets or curtains. Could grandsires and granddames return
+ to life like the Sleeping Beauty, they would find that the world had stood
+ still during their slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melun possesses perhaps one of the few statues that may not be called
+ superfluous, and I confess I had been attracted thither rather by memories
+ of its greatest son than by its picturesque scenery and fine old churches.
+ The first translator of Plutarch into his native tongue was born here, and
+ as we should expect, has been worthily commemorated by his fellow
+ citizens. A most charming statue of Amyot stands in front of the grey,
+ turreted Hôtel de Ville. In sixteenth century doctoral dress, loose
+ flowing robes and square flat cap, sits the great scholiast, as intently
+ absorbed in his book as St. Jerome in the exquisite canvas of our own
+ National Gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the Hôtel de Ville an opening shows a small, beautifully kept
+ flower garden, just now a blaze of petunias, zinnias, and a second crop of
+ roses. Long I lingered before this noble monument, one only of the many
+ raised to Amyot&rsquo;s memory, of whom Montaigne wrote:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ignoramuses that we are, we should all have been lost, had not this book
+ (the translation of Plutarch) dragged us out of the mire; thanks to it, we
+ now venture to write and to discourse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And musing on the scholar and his kindred, a favourite line of Browning&rsquo;s
+ came into my mind&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man decided not to live but to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed the whole of &ldquo;A Grammarian&rsquo;s Funeral&rdquo; were here appropriate. Is it
+ not men after this type of whom we feel
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Our low life was the level&rsquo;s and the night&rsquo;s.
+ He&rsquo;s for the morning&rdquo;?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To my surprise I found the church of St. Aspais locked. A courteous
+ hair-dresser thereupon told me that all churches in Melun were closed from
+ noon till half past one, but that, as noon had only just struck, if I were
+ brisk I might possibly catch the sacristan. After a pretty hot chase I
+ succeeded in finding a deaf, decrepit, dingy old man who showed me round
+ the church, although evidently very impatient for his mid-day meal. He
+ informed me that this closing of churches at Melun had been necessitated
+ of late years by a series of robberies. From twelve till half past one
+ o&rsquo;clock no worshippers are present as a rule, hence the thieves&rsquo;
+ opportunity. Unfortunately marauders do not strip beautiful interiors of
+ the tinselly gew-gaws that so often deface them; in this respect, however,
+ St. Aspais being comparatively an exception. Alike within and without the
+ proportions are magnificent, and the old stained glass is not marred by
+ modern crudities. I do not here by any means exhaust the sights of this
+ ancient town, from which, by the way, Barbizon is now reached in twenty
+ minutes, an electric tramway plying regularly between Melun and that
+ famous art pilgrimage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; MORET-SUR-LOING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The valley of the Loing abounds in captivating spots, Moret-sur-Loing
+ bearing the palm. Over the ancient town, bird-like broods a majestic
+ church, as out-spread wings its wide expanse of roof, while below by
+ translucent depths and foliage richly varied, stretch quarters old and
+ new, the canal intersecting the river at right angles. Lovely as is the
+ river on which all who choose may spend long summer days, the canal to my
+ thinking is lovelier still. Straight as an arrow it saunters between
+ avenues of poplar, the lights and shadows of wood and water, the sunburnt,
+ stalwart barge folk, their huge gondoliers affording endless pictures.
+ Hard as is undoubtedly the life of the rope tower, rude as may appear this
+ amphibious existence, there are cheerful sides to the picture. Many of
+ these floating habitations possess a fireside nook cosy as that of a
+ Parisian concierge, I was never tired of strolling along the canal and
+ watching the barge folk. One day a friend and myself found a large barge
+ laden with coal at the head of the canal, the huge dark framework and its
+ sombre burden lighted up with touches of grace and colour. At the farther
+ end of the vessel was hung a cage of canaries, at the other end was a
+ stand of pot-flowers, geraniums and petunias in full bloom and all the
+ more brilliant by virtue of contrast. A neighbour of the bargeman, a
+ bright, intelligent woman, brown as a gipsy but well-spoken and of tidy
+ appearance, invited us to enter. Imagine the neatest, prettiest little
+ room in the world, parlour, bedchamber and kitchen in one, every object so
+ placed as to make the most of available space. On a small side-table&mdash;and
+ of course under such circumstances each article must be sizable&mdash;stood
+ a sewing machine, in the corner was a bedstead with exquisitely clean
+ bedding, in another a tiny cooking stove. Vases of flowers, framed
+ pictures and ornamental quicksilver balls had been found place for, this
+ bargewoman&rsquo;s home aptly illustrating Shakespeare&rsquo;s adage&mdash;&ldquo;Order
+ gives all things view.&rdquo; The brisk, weather-beaten mistress now came up, no
+ little gratified by our interest and our praises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ladies would perhaps like to make a little journey with me?&rdquo; she
+ asked, &ldquo;nothing easier, we start to-morrow morning at six o&rsquo;clock for
+ Nevers, you could take the train back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never perhaps in our lives had myself and my companion received an
+ invitation so out of the way, so bewilderingly tempting! And we felt too,
+ with a pang, that never again in all probability should we receive such
+ another. But on this especial day we were not staying at Moret, only
+ running over for the afternoon from our headquarters at Bourron.
+ Acceptance was thus hemmed round with small impediments. And by way of
+ consolation, next morning the glorious weather broke. A downpour recalling
+ our own lakeland would anyhow have kept us ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Another time then!&rdquo; had said the kind hostess of the barge at parting.
+ She seemed as sorry as ourselves that the little project she had mooted so
+ cordially could not be carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Loing canal joins the Seine at Saint Mammes, a few kilomètres lower
+ down, continuing its course of thirty kilomètres to Bleneau in the Nièvre.
+ Canal life in Eastern France is a characteristic feature, the whole region
+ being intersected by a network of waterways, those <i>chemins qui marchent</i>,
+ or walking roads as Michelet picturesquely calls them. And strolling on
+ the banks of the canal here you may be startled by an astonishing sight,
+ you see folks walking, or apparently walking, on water. Standing bolt
+ upright on a tiny raft, carefully maintaining their balance, country
+ people are towed from one side to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These suburban and riverside quarters are full of charm. The soft reds and
+ browns of the houses, the old-world architecture and romantic sites, tempt
+ an artist at every turn. And all in love with a Venetian existence may
+ here find it nearer home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few villas let furnished during the summer months have little lawns
+ winding down to the water&rsquo;s edge and a boat moored alongside. Thus their
+ happy inmates can spend hot, lazy days on the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning our backs on the canal, by way of ivy-mantled walls, ancient mills
+ and tumbledown houses, we reach the Porte du Pont or Gate of the Bridge.
+ With other towns of the period, Moret was fortified. The girdle of walls
+ is broken and dilapidated, whilst firm as when erected in the fourteenth
+ century still stand the city gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the two the Porte du Pont is the least imposing and ornamental, but it
+ possesses a horrifying interest. In an upper storey is preserved one of
+ those man-cages said to have been invented for the gratification of Louis
+ XI, that strange tyrant to whose ears were equally acceptable the shrieks
+ of his tortured victims and the apt repartee of ready-witted subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much do you earn a day?&rdquo; he once asked a little scullion, as
+ incognito he entered the royal kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By God&rsquo;s grace as much as the King,&rdquo; replied the lad; &ldquo;I earn my bread
+ and he can do no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So pleased was the King with this saying that it made the speaker&rsquo;s
+ fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We climb two flights of dark, narrow stone stairs reaching a bare chamber
+ having small apertures, enlargements of the mere slits formerly admitting
+ light and air. The man-cage occupies one corner. It is made of stout oaken
+ ribs strongly bound together with iron, its proportions just allowing the
+ captive to lie down at full length and take a turn of two or three steps.
+ De Commines tells us that the cage invented by Cardinal Balue, and in
+ which he languished for eleven years, was narrower still. An average sized
+ man could not stand therein upright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bolts and bars are still in perfect order. Nothing more brings home to
+ us the abomination of the whole thing than to see the official draw these
+ Brobdingnagian bolts and turn these gigantic keys. The locksmith&rsquo;s art was
+ but too well understood in those days. By whom and for whom this living
+ tomb was made or brought hither local records do not say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a stage higher up a magnificent panorama is obtained, Moret, old and
+ new, set round with the green and the blue, its greenery and bright river,
+ far away its noble aqueduct, further still looking eastward the valley of
+ the Loing spread out as a map, the dark ramparts of Fontainebleau forest
+ half framing the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town itself is a trifle unsavoury and unswept. Municipal authorities
+ seem particularly stingy in the matter of brooms, brushes and water-carts.
+ Such little disagreeables must not prevent the traveller from exploring
+ every corner. But the real, the primary attraction of Moret lies less in
+ its historic monuments and antiquated streets than in its <i>chemins qui
+ marchent</i>, its ever reposeful water-ways. Like most French towns Moret
+ is linked with English history. Its fine old church was consecrated by
+ Thomas à-Becket in 1166. Three hundred years later the town was taken by
+ Henry V., and re-taken by Charles VII. a decade after. Not long since five
+ hundred skulls supposed to have been those of English prisoners were
+ unearthed here; as they were all found massed together, the theory is that
+ the entire number had surrendered and been summarily decapitated, methods
+ of warfare that have apparently found advocates in our own day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most visitors to Paris will have had pointed out to them the so-called
+ &ldquo;Maison François Premier&rdquo; on the Cour La Reine. This richly ornate and
+ graceful specimen of Renaissance architecture formerly stood at Moret, and
+ bit by bit was removed to the capital in 1820. A spiral stone staircase
+ and several fragments of heraldic sculpture were left behind. Badly placed
+ as the house was here, it seems a thousand pities that Moret should have
+ thus been robbed of an architectural gem Paris could well have spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first stay at Moret three years ago lasted several weeks. I had joined
+ friends occupying a pretty little furnished house belonging to the
+ officiating Mayor. We lived after simplest fashion but to our hearts&rsquo;
+ content. One of those indescribably obliging women of all work, came every
+ day to cook, clean and wait on us. Most of our meals were taken among our
+ flower beds and raspberry bushes. The only drawback to enjoyment may at
+ first sight appear unworthy of mention, but it was not so. We had no
+ latchkey. Now as every-one of all work knows, they are constantly popping
+ in and out of doors, one moment they are off to market, the next to warm
+ up their husbands&rsquo; soup, and so on and so on. As for ourselves, were we
+ not at Moret on purpose to be perpetually running about also? Thus it
+ happened that somebody or other was always being locked out or locked in;
+ either Monsieur finding the household abroad had pocketed the key and
+ instead of returning in ten minutes&rsquo; time had lighted upon a subject he
+ must absolutely sketch then and there; or Madame could not get through her
+ shopping as expeditiously as she had hoped; or their guest returned from
+ her walk long before she was due; what with one miscalculation and
+ another, now one of us had to knock at a neighbour&rsquo;s door, now another
+ effected an entrance by means of a ladder, and now the key would be wholly
+ missing and for the time being we were roofless, as if burnt out of house
+ and home. Sometimes we were locked in, sometimes we were locked out, a
+ current &ldquo;Open Sesame&rdquo; we never had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no &ldquo;regrettable incidents&rdquo; marred a delightful holiday. Imbroglios
+ such as these only leave memories to smile at, and add zest to
+ recollection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; BOURRON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two years ago some Anglo-French friends joyfully announced their
+ acquisition of a delightful little property adjoining Fontainebleau
+ forest. &ldquo;Come and see for yourself,&rdquo; they wrote, &ldquo;we are sure that you
+ will be charmed with our purchase!&rdquo; A little later I journeyed to Bourron,
+ half an hour from Moret on the Bourbonnais line, on arriving hardly less
+ disconcerted than Mrs. Primrose by the gross of green spectacles. No trim,
+ green verandahed villa, no inviting vine-trellised walk, no luxuriant
+ vegetable garden or brilliant flower beds greeted my eyes; instead,
+ dilapidated walls, abutting on these a peasant&rsquo;s cottage, and in front an
+ acre or two of bare dusty field! My friends had indeed become the owners
+ of a dismantled bakery and its appurtenances, to the uninitiated as
+ unpromising a domain as could well be imagined. But I discovered that the
+ purchasers were wiser in their generation than myself. Noticing my
+ crestfallen look they had said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only wait till next year, and you will see what a bargain we have made.
+ You will find us admirably housed and feasting on peaches and grapes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True enough, twelve months later, I found a wonderful transformation. That
+ a substantial dwelling now occupied the site of the dismantled bakery was
+ no matter for surprise, the change out of doors seemed magical. Nothing
+ could have looked more unpromising than that stretch of field, a mere bit
+ of waste, your feet sinking into the sand as if you were crossing the
+ desert. Now, the longed-for <i>tonnelle</i> or vine-covered way offered
+ shade, petunias made a splendid show, choice roses scented the air, whilst
+ the fruit and vegetables would have done credit to a market-gardener.
+ Peaches and grapes ripened on the wall, big turnips and tomatoes brilliant
+ as vermilion took care of themselves. It was not only a case of the
+ wilderness made to blossom as the rose, but of the horn of plenty filled
+ to overflowing, prize flowers, fruit and vegetables everywhere. For the
+ soil hereabouts, if indeed soil it can be called, and the climate of
+ Bourron, possess very rare and specific qualities. On this light, dry
+ sand, or dust covering a substratum of rock, vegetation springs up all but
+ unbidden, and when once above ground literally takes care of itself. As to
+ climate, its excellence may be summed up in the epithet, anti-asthmatic.
+ Although we are on the very hem of forty thousand acres of forest, the
+ atmosphere is one of extraordinary dryness. Rain may fall in torrents
+ throughout an entire day. The sandy soil is so thorough an absorbent that
+ next morning the air will be as dry as usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This house reminded me of a tiny side door opening into some vast
+ cathedral. We cross the threshold and find ourselves at once in the
+ forest, in close proximity moreover to its least-known but not least
+ majestic sites. We may turn either to right or left, gradually climbing a
+ densely wooded headland. The first ascent lands us in an hour on the
+ Redoute de Bourron, the second, occupying only half the time, on a spur of
+ the forest offering a less famous but hardly less magnificent perspective,
+ nothing to mar the picture as a whole, sunny plain, winding river and
+ scattered townlings looking much as they must have done to Balzac when
+ passing through three-quarters of a century ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This eastern verge of the Fontainebleau forest is of especial beauty; the
+ frowning headlands seem set there as sentinels jealously guarding its
+ integrity, on the watch against human encroachments, defying time and
+ change and cataclysmal upheaval. Boldly stands out each wooded crag, the
+ one confronting the rising, the other the sinking sun, behind both massed
+ the world of forest, spread before them as a carpet, peaceful rural
+ scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must now describe a spot, the name of which will probably be new to all
+ excepting close students of Balzac. The great novelist loved the valley of
+ the Loing almost as fondly as his native Touraine; and if these pastoral
+ scenes did not inspire a <i>chef d&rsquo;oeuvre</i>, they have thereby immensely
+ gained in interest. &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët,&rdquo; of which I shall have more to say
+ further on, is not to be compared to such masterpieces as &ldquo;Eugénie
+ Grandet.&rdquo; But a leading incident of &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo; occurs at Bourron&mdash;a
+ sufficient reason for recalling the story here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beauty of our village, like the beauty of French women, to quote
+ Michelet, &ldquo;is made up of little nothings.&rdquo; There are a hundred and one
+ pretty things to see but very few to describe. Who could wish it
+ otherwise? Little nothings of an engaging kind better agree with us as
+ daily fare than the seven wonders of the world. With forty thousand acres
+ of forest at our doors we do not want M. Mattel&rsquo;s newly discovered
+ underground river within reach as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From our garden we yet look upon scenes not of every day. Those sweeps of
+ bluish-green foliage strikingly contrasted with the brilliant vine remind
+ us that we are in France, and in a region with most others having its
+ specialities. Asparagus, not literally but figuratively, nourishes the
+ entire population of Bourron. Everyone here is a market gardener on his
+ own account, and the cultivation of asparagus for the Paris markets is a
+ leading feature of local commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no more graceful foliage than that of this plant, and gratefully
+ the eye rests upon these waves of delicate green under a blazing,
+ grape-ripening sky. Making gold-green lines between are vines, a
+ succession of asparagus beds and vineyards separating our village from its
+ better known and more populous neighbour, Marlotte. In the opposite
+ direction we see brown-roofed, white-walled houses surmounted by a pretty
+ little spire. This is Bourron. To reach it we pass a double row of
+ homesteads, rustic interiors of small farmer or market gardener, the one,
+ as our French neighbours say, more picturesque than the other. Each, no
+ matter how ill kept, is set off by an ornamental border, zinnias,
+ begonias, roses and petunias as obviously showing signs of care and
+ science. Oddly enough the finest display of flowers often adorns the least
+ tidy premises. And oddly enough, rather perhaps as we should expect it, in
+ not one, but in every respect, this French village is the exact opposite
+ of its English counterpart. In England every tenant of a cottage pays
+ rent, there, not an inhabitant, however poor, but sits under his own vine
+ and his own fig-tree. In England the farm-house faces the road and the
+ premises lie behind. Here manure-heap, granary and pig styes open on the
+ highway, the dwellings being at the back. In England a man&rsquo;s home, called
+ his castle, is no more defended than the Bedouin&rsquo;s tent. Here at nightfall
+ the small peasant proprietor is as securely entrenched within walls as a
+ feudal baron in his moated château. In England ninety-nine householders
+ out of a hundred are perpetually changing their domicile. Here folks live
+ and die under the paternal roof that has sheltered generations. Nor does
+ diversity end with circumstances and surroundings. As will be seen in
+ another chapter, habits of life, modes of thought and standards of duty
+ show contrasts equally marked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bourron possesses twelve hundred and odd souls, most of whom are peasants
+ who make a living out of their small patrimony. Destined perhaps one day
+ to rival its neighbour Marlotte in popularity&mdash;even to become a
+ second Barbizon&mdash;it is as yet the sleepiest, most rustic retreat
+ imaginable. The climate would appear to be not only anti-asthmatic but
+ anti-everything in the shape of malady. Anyhow, if folks fall ill they
+ have to send elsewhere for a doctor. Minor complaints&mdash;cuts, bruises
+ and snake bites&mdash;are attended to by a Fontainebleau chemist. Every
+ day we hear the horn of his messenger who cycles through the village
+ calling for prescriptions and leaving drugs and draughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A post office, of course, Bourron possesses, but let no one imagine that a
+ post office in out of the way country places implies a supply of postage
+ stamps. English people are the greatest scribblers by post in the world,
+ whilst our wiser French neighbours appear to be the laziest. An amusing
+ dilemma had occurred here just before my arrival. One day my friends
+ applied to the post office for stamps, but none were to be had for love or
+ money. Off somebody cycled to Marlotte, which possesses not only a post
+ and telegraph, but a money order office as well&mdash;same reply, next the
+ adjoining village of Grez was visited and with no better result&mdash;&ldquo;Supplies
+ have not yet reached us from headquarters,&rdquo; said the third postmistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps instead of smiling contemptuously we should take a moral to heart.
+ The amount of time, money, eyesight and handcraft expended among ourselves
+ on letter writing so-called is simply appalling. Was it not Napoleon who
+ said that all letters if left unanswered for a month answered themselves?
+ Too many Englishwomen spend the greater portion of the day in what is no
+ longer a delicate art, but mere time-killing, after the manner of
+ patience, games of cards and similar pastimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bourron is a most orderly village; within its precincts liberty is not
+ allowed to degenerate into licence. As in summer-time folks are fond of
+ spending their evenings abroad, a municipal law has enforced quiet after
+ ten o&rsquo;clock. Thus precisely on the stroke of ten, alike café, garden,
+ private summer-house or doorstep are deserted, everyone betakes himself
+ indoors, leaving his neighbours to enjoy unbroken repose. A most salutary
+ by-law! Would it were put in force throughout the length and breadth of
+ France! At Chatouroux I have been kept awake all night by the gossip of a
+ <i>sergeant de ville</i> and a lounger close to my window. At Tours, La
+ Châtre and Bourges my fellow-traveller and myself could get no sleep on
+ account of street revellers, whilst at how many other places have not
+ holiday trips been spoiled by unquiet nights? All honour then to the
+ aediles of dear little Bourron!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued</i>.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Forty thousand acres of woodland at one&rsquo;s doors would seem a fact
+ sufficiently suggestive; to particularize the attractions of Bourron after
+ this statement were surely supererogation. Yet, for my own pleasure as
+ much as for the use of my readers, I must jot down one or two especially
+ persistent memories, impressions of solemnity, beauty and repose never to
+ be effaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it is only the cyclist who can realise such an immensity as the
+ Fontainebleau forest. From end to end these vast sweeps are now
+ intersected by splendid roads and by-roads. Old-fashioned folks, for whom
+ the horseless vehicle came too late, can but envy wheelmen and wheelwomen
+ as they skim through vista after vista, outstripping one&rsquo;s horse and
+ carriage as a greyhound outstrips a decrepit poodle. On the other hand
+ only inveterate loiterers, the Lazy Lawrences of travel, can appreciate
+ the subtler beauties of this woodland world. There are certain sights and
+ sounds not to be caught by hurried observers, evanescent aspects of
+ cloud-land and tree-land, rock and undergrowth, passing notes of bird and
+ insect, varied melodies, if we may so express it, of summer breeze and
+ autumn wind&mdash;in fine, a dozen experiences enjoyed one day, not
+ repeated on the next. The music of the forest is a quiet music and has to
+ be listened for, hardly on the cyclist&rsquo;s ear falls the song or rather
+ accompaniment of the grasshopper, &ldquo;the Muse of the wayside,&rdquo; a French poet
+ has so exquisitely apostrophized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One&rsquo;s forest companion should be of a taciturn and contemplative turn.
+ Only thus can we drink in the sense of such solitude and immensity;
+ realizing to the full what indeed these words may mean, he may wander for
+ hours without encountering a soul, very few birds are heard by the way,
+ but the hum of the insect world, that dreamy go-between, hardly silence,
+ hardly to be called noise, keeps us perpetual company, and our eyes must
+ ever be open for beautiful little living things. Now a green and gold
+ lizard flashes across a bit of grey rock, now a dragon-fly disports its
+ sapphire wings amid the yellowing ferns or purple ling, butterflies,
+ white, blue, and black and orange, flit hither and thither, whilst little
+ beetles, blue as enamel beads, enliven the mossy undergrowth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One pre-eminent charm indeed of the Fontainebleau forest is this wealth of
+ undergrowth, bushes, brambles and ferns making a second lesser thicket on
+ all sides. In sociable moods delightful it is to go a-blackberrying here.
+ I am almost tempted to say that if you want to realise the lusciousness of
+ a hedgerow dessert you must cater for yourself in these forty thousand
+ acres of blackberry orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the foremost, the crowning excellence of Fontainebleau forest consists
+ in its variety. France itself, the &ldquo;splendid hexagon,&rdquo; with its mountains,
+ rivers and plains, is hardly more varied than this vast area of rock and
+ woodland. We can choose between sites, savage or idyllic, pastoral or
+ grandiose, here finding a sunny glade, the very spot for a picnic, there
+ break-neck declivities and gloomy chasms. The magnificent ruggedness of
+ Alpine scenery is before our eyes, without the awfulness of snow-clad
+ peaks or the blinding dazzle of glacier. In more than one place we could
+ almost fancy that some mountain has been upheaved and split asunder, the
+ clefts formed by these gigantic fragments being now filled with veteran
+ trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The formation of the forest has puzzled geologists, to this day the origin
+ of its rocky substratum remaining undetermined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within half an hour&rsquo;s stroll of Bourron lies the so-called &ldquo;Mare aux Fées&rdquo;
+ or Fairies&rsquo; Mere, as sweet a spot to boil one&rsquo;s kettle in as holiday
+ makers can desire, at the same time affording the best possible
+ illustration of what I have just insisted upon. For this favourite resort
+ is in a certain sense microcosmic, giving in miniature those
+ characteristics for which the forest is remarkable. Smooth and sunny as a
+ garden plot is the open glade wherein we now halt for tea, and while the
+ kettle boils we have time for a most suggestive bird&rsquo;s eye view. It is a
+ little world that we survey from the borders of this rock-hemmed,
+ forest-girt lake, one perspective after another with varying gradations of
+ colour making us realize the many-featured, chequered area spread before
+ us. From this coign of vantage are discerned alike the sterner and the
+ more smiling beauties of the forest, rocky defiles, gloomy passes, sunlit
+ lawns and mossy dells, scenery varied in itself and yet varying again with
+ the passing hour and changing month. And such suggestion of almost
+ infinite variety is not gained only from the Fairies&rsquo; Mere. From a dozen
+ points, not the same view but the same kind of view may be obtained, each
+ differing from the other, except in charm and immensity. Within a walk of
+ home also stands one of the numerous monuments scattered throughout the
+ forest. The Croix de Saint Hérem, now a useful landmark for cyclists, has
+ a curious history. It was erected in 1666 by a certain Marquis de
+ Saint-Hérem, celebrated for his ugliness, and centuries later was the
+ scene of the most extraordinary rendezvous on record. Here, in 1804, every
+ detail having been theatrically arranged beforehand, took place the
+ so-called chance meeting of Napoleon and Pope Pius VII. The Emperor had
+ arranged a grand hunt for that day, and in hunting dress, his dogs at his
+ heels, awaited the pontiff by the cross of Saint Hérem. As the pair
+ lovingly embraced each other the Imperial horses ran away; this apparent
+ escapade formed part of the programme, and Napoleon stepped into the
+ Pope&rsquo;s carriage, seating himself on his visitor&rsquo;s, rather his prisoner&rsquo;s,
+ right. A few years later another rencontre not without historic irony took
+ place here. In 1816, Louis XVIII. received on this spot the future mother,
+ so it was hoped, of French Kings, the adventurous Caroline of Naples,
+ afterwards Duchesse de Berri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crosses monuments of the forest are usefully catalogued in local
+ guide-books, and many have historic associations. The most interesting of
+ these&mdash;readers will excuse the Irish bull&mdash;is a monument that
+ may be said never to have existed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great Polish patriot Kosciusko spent the last fifteen years of his
+ life in a hamlet near Nemours, and on his death the inhabitants of that
+ and neighbouring villages projected a double memorial, in other words, a
+ tiny chapel, the ruins of which are still seen near Episy, and a mound to
+ be added to every year and to be called &ldquo;La Montagne de Kosciusko,&rdquo; or
+ Kosciusko&rsquo;s mountain. Particulars of this generous and romantic scheme are
+ preserved in the archives of Montigny. The inauguration of the mound took
+ place on the ninth of October 1836. To the sound of martial music, drums
+ and cannon, the first layers of earth were deposited, men, women and
+ children taking part in the proceedings. A year later no less than ten
+ thousand French friends of Poland with mattock and spade added several
+ feet to Kosciusko&rsquo;s mountain. But the celebration got noised abroad.
+ Afraid of anti-Russian manifestations the government of Louis Philippe
+ prohibited any further Polish fêtes. Thus it came about that, as I have
+ said, the most interesting monument in the forest remains an idea. And all
+ things considered, neither French nor English admirers of the exiled hero
+ could to-day very well carve on the adjoining rock,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;And Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Some time or other the Russian Imperial pair may visit Fontainebleau,
+ whilst an English tourist with <i>The Daily Mail</i> in his pocket would
+ naturally and sheepishly look the other way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another half hour&rsquo;s stroll and we find ourselves in an atmosphere of art,
+ fashion and sociability. Only a mile either of woodland, field path or
+ high road separates Bourron from its more populous and highly popular
+ neighbour, Marlotte. Here every house has an artist&rsquo;s north window, the
+ road is alive with motor cars, you can even buy a newspaper! Marlotte
+ possesses a big, I should say comfortable, hotel, is very cosmopolitan and
+ very pretty. Anglo-French households here, as at Bourron, favour
+ Anglo-French relations. In Marlotte drawing-rooms we are in France, but
+ always with a pleasant reminder of England and of true English
+ hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; BOURRON&mdash;<i>continued.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I will now say something about my numerous acquaintances at Bourron. After
+ three summer holidays spent in this friendly little spot I can boast of a
+ pretty large visiting list, the kind of list requiring no cards or
+ ceremonious procedure. My hostess, a Frenchwoman, and myself used to drop
+ in for a chat with this neighbour and that whenever we passed their way,
+ always being cheerily welcomed and always pressed to stay a little longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French peasant is the most laborious, at the same time the most
+ leisurely, individual in the world. Urgent indeed must be those farming
+ operations that prevent him from enjoying a talk. Conversation,
+ interchange of ideas, give and take by word of mouth, are as necessary to
+ the Frenchman&rsquo;s well-being as oxygen to his lungs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man,&rdquo; writes Montesquieu, &ldquo;is described as a sociable animal.&rdquo; From this
+ point of view it appears to me that the Frenchman may be called more of a
+ man than others; he is first and foremost a man, since he seems especially
+ made for society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere the same great writer adds:&mdash;&ldquo;You may see in Paris
+ individuals who have enough to live upon for the rest of their days, yet
+ they labour so arduously as to shorten their days, in order, as they say,
+ to assure themselves of a livelihood.&rdquo; These two marked characteristics
+ are as true of the French peasant now-a-days as of the polite society
+ described in the &ldquo;Lettres Persanes.&rdquo; In the eighteenth century cultivated
+ people did little else but talk. Morning, noon and night, their
+ epigrammatic tongues were busy. Conversation in historic salons became a
+ fine art. There are no such literary côteries in our time. What with one
+ excitement and another, the Parisian world chats but has no time for real
+ conversation. Perhaps for <i>Gauloiseries</i>, true Gallic salt, we must
+ now go to the unlettered, the sons of the soil, whose ancestors were boors
+ when wit sparkled among their social superiors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are one or two types illustrating both characteristics, excellent
+ types in their way of the small peasant proprietor hereabouts, a class
+ having no counterpart or approximation to a counterpart in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first visit I describe was paid one evening to an old gardener whom I
+ will call the Père A&mdash;. Bent partly with toil, partly with age, you
+ would have at once supposed that his working days were well over,
+ especially on learning his circumstances, for sole owner he was of the
+ little domain to which he had now retired for the day. Of benevolent
+ aspect, shrewd, every inch alive despite infirmities, he received his
+ neighbour and her English guest with rustic but cordial urbanity, at once
+ entering into conversation. With evident pride and pleasure he watched my
+ glances at premises and garden, house and outbuildings ramshackle enough,
+ even poverty-stricken to look at, here not an indication of comfortable
+ circumstances much less of independent means; the bit of land half farm,
+ half garden, however, was fairly well kept and of course productive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, this dwelling is mine and the two hectares (four acres four hundred
+ and odd feet), aye,&rdquo; he added self-complacently, &ldquo;and I have a little
+ money besides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you live here all by yourself and still work for wages?&rdquo; I asked. His
+ reply was eminently characteristic. &ldquo;I work for my children.&rdquo; These
+ children he told me were two grown up sons, one of them being like himself
+ a gardener, both having work. Thus in order to hoard up a little more for
+ two able-bodied young men, here was a bent, aged man living penuriously
+ and alone, his only companion being a beautiful and evidently much petted
+ donkey. I ventured to express an English view of the matter, namely, the
+ undesirability of encouraging idleness and self-indulgence in one&rsquo;s
+ children by toiling and moiling for them in old age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He nodded his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, all that you say is true, but so it is with me. I must
+ work for my children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus blindly are brought about the parricidal tragedies that Zola, Guy
+ de Maupassant and other novelists have utilized in fiction, and with which
+ we are familiarized in French criminal reports&mdash;parents and
+ grandparents got rid of for the sake of their coveted hoardings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus also are generated in the rich and leisured classes that intense
+ selfishness of the rising generation so movingly portrayed in M. Hervieu&rsquo;s
+ play, &ldquo;La Course du Flambeau.&rdquo; No one who has witnessed Mme. Réjane&rsquo;s
+ presentment of the adoring, disillusioned mother can ever forget it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On leaving, the Père A&mdash;&mdash; presented us with grapes and pears,
+ carefully selecting the finest for his English visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gate I threw a Parthian dart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t work too hard,&rdquo; I said, whereupon came the burden of his song:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One must work for one&rsquo;s children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This good neighbour could neither read nor write, a quite exceptional case
+ in these days. Our second visit was made to a person similarly situated,
+ but belonging to a different order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame B&mdash;&mdash;, a widow, was also advanced in years and also lived
+ by herself on her little property, consisting of walled-in cottage and
+ outhouses, with straggling garden or rather orchard, garden and field in
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This good woman is what country folks in these parts call rich. I have no
+ doubt that an English farmeress in her circumstances would have the
+ neatest little parlour, a tidy maid to wait upon her, and most likely take
+ afternoon tea in a black silk gown. Our hostess here wore the dress of a
+ poor but respectable working woman. Her interior was almost as bare and
+ primitive as that of the Boer farmhouse in the Paris Exhibition. Although
+ between six and seven o&rsquo;clock, there was no sign whatever of preparation
+ for an evening meal. Indeed on every side things looked poverty-stricken.
+ Not a penny had evidently been spent upon kitchen or bedrooms for years
+ and years, the brick floor of both being bare, the furniture having done
+ duty for generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This &ldquo;rentière,&rdquo; or person living upon independent means, did not match
+ her sordid surroundings. Although toil-worn, tanned and wrinkled, her face
+ &ldquo;brown as the ribbed sea-sand,&rdquo; there was a certain refinement about look,
+ speech and manner, distinguishing her from the good man her neighbour.
+ After a little conversation I soon found out that she had literary tastes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Living alone and finding the winter evenings long I hire books from a
+ lending library at Fontainebleau,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I opened my eyes in amazement. Seldom indeed had I heard of a peasant
+ proprietor in France caring for books, much less spending money upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what do you read?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything I can get,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Madame&rsquo;s husband,&rdquo; here she looked
+ at my friend, &ldquo;has kindly lent me several.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among these I afterwards found had been Zola&rsquo;s &ldquo;Rome&rdquo; and &ldquo;Le Désastre&rdquo; by
+ the brothers Margueritte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the Père A&mdash;&mdash; she had married children and entertained
+ precisely the same notion of parental duty. The few sous spent upon such
+ beguilement of long winter nights were most likely economized by some
+ little deprivation. There is something extremely pathetic in this
+ patriarchal spirit, this uncompromising, ineradicable resolve to hand down
+ a little patrimony not only intact but enlarged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our peasants live too sordidly,&rdquo; observed a Frenchman to me a day or two
+ later. &ldquo;They carry thrift to the pitch of avarice and vice. Zola&rsquo;s &lsquo;La
+ Terre&rsquo; is not without foundation on fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And excellent as is the principle of forethought, invaluable as is the
+ habit of laying by for a rainy day, I have at last come to the conclusion
+ that of the two national weaknesses, French avarice and English lavishness
+ and love of spending, the latter is more in accordance with progress and
+ the spirit of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another part of the village we called upon a hale old body of
+ seventy-seven, who not only lived alone and did everything for herself
+ indoors but the entire work of a market garden, every inch of the two and
+ a half acres being, of course, her own. Piled against an inner wall we saw
+ a dozen or so faggots each weighing, we were told, half a hundredweight.
+ Will it be believed that this old woman had picked up and carried from the
+ forest on her back every one of these faggots? The poor, or rather those
+ who will, are allowed to glean firewood in all the State forests of
+ France. Let no tourist bestow a few sous upon aged men and women bearing
+ home such treasure-trove! Quite possibly the dole may affront some owner
+ of houses and lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we inspected her garden, walls covered with fine grapes, tomatoes and
+ melons, of splendid quality, to say nothing of vegetables in profusion, it
+ seemed all the more difficult to reconcile facts so incongruous. Here was
+ a market gardener on her own account, mistress of all she surveyed, glad
+ as a gipsy to pick up sticks for winter use. But the burden of her story
+ was the same:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Il faut travailler pour ses enfants&rdquo; (one must work for one&rsquo;s children),
+ she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these little farm-houses are so many homely fortresses, cottage and
+ outhouses being securely walled in, a precaution necessary with aged,
+ moneyed folks living absolutely alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fourth visit was paid to a charming old Philémon and Baucis, the best
+ possible specimens of their class. The husband lay in bed, ill of an
+ incurable malady, and spotlessly white were his tasselled nightcap, shirt
+ and bedclothes. Very clean and neat too was the bedroom opening on to the
+ little front yard, beneath each window of the one-storeyed dwelling being
+ a brilliant border of asters. The housewife also was a picture of
+ tidiness, her cotton gown carefully patched and scrupulously clean. This
+ worthy couple are said to be worth fifty thousand francs. The wife, a
+ sexagenarian, does all the work of the house besides waiting on her good
+ man, to whom she is devoted, but a married son and daughter-in-law share
+ her duties at night. Here was no touch of sordidness or suggestion of &ldquo;La
+ Terre,&rdquo; instead a delightful picture of rustic dignity and ease. The
+ housewife sold us half a bushel of pears, these two like their neighbours
+ living by the produce of their small farm and garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I often dropped in upon Madame B&mdash;&mdash; to whom even morning calls
+ were acceptable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the occasion of my farewell visit she had something pretty to say about
+ one of my own novels, a French translation of which I had presented her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that you have some books of your own?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here they are,&rdquo; she said, depositing an armful on the table. &ldquo;But I have
+ never read much, and mostly <i>bibelots</i>&rdquo; (trifles.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her poor little library consisted of <i>bibelots</i> indeed, a history of
+ Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc for children, and half a dozen other works, mostly school
+ prizes of the kind awarded before school prizes in France were worth the
+ paper on which they were printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. &mdash; LARCHANT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a certain stimulating quality of elasticity and crispness in the
+ French atmosphere which our own does not possess. France, moreover, with
+ its seven climates&mdash;for the description of these, see Reclus&rsquo;
+ Geography&mdash;does undoubtedly offer longer, less broken, spells of hot
+ summer weather than the United Kingdom. But let me for once and for all
+ dispel a widespread illusion. The late Lord Lytton, when Ambassador in
+ Paris, used to say that in the French capital you could procure any
+ climate you pleased. And experience proves that without budging an inch
+ you may in France get as many and as rapid climatic changes as anywhere
+ else under the sun. At noon in mid-May last I was breakfasting with
+ friends on the Champs Elysées, when my hostess put a match to the fire and
+ my host jumped up and lighted six wax candles. So dense had become the
+ heavens that we could no longer see to handle knives and forks! Hail,
+ wind, darkness and temperature recalled a November squall at home. Yet the
+ day before I had enjoyed perfect summer weather in the Jardin
+ d&rsquo;Acclimitation. Invariableness is no more an attribute of the French
+ climate than our own. Wherever we go we must take a change of dress, for
+ all the world as if we were bound for the other side of the Tweed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first Sunday at Bourron, on this third visit, was of perfect stillness,
+ unclouded brilliance and southern languor, heralding, so we fondly
+ imagined, the very morrow for an excursion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the night a strong wind rose up, but as we had ordered a carriage for
+ Larchant, and as carriages in these parts are not always to be had, as,
+ moreover, grown folks no more than children like to defer their pleasure,
+ off we set, two of the party on cycles forming a body guard. There seemed
+ no likelihood of rain and in the forest we should not feel the wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first mile or two all went well. Far ahead of us our cyclists
+ bowled gaily along in the forest avenues, all of us being sheltered from
+ the wind. It was not till we skirted a wide opening that we felt the full
+ force of the tornado, soon overtaking our blowzed, dishevelled companions,
+ both on foot and looking miserable enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We re-entered the forest, and a little later, emerging from the fragrant
+ depths of a pine wood, got our first view of Larchant, coming suddenly
+ upon what looks like a cathedral towering above the plain, at its base a
+ clustering village, whitewashed brown-roofed houses amid vineyards and
+ orchards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A grandiose view it is, recalling the minaret of Mansourah near Tclemcen
+ in Algeria, that gigantic monolith apparently carved out of Indian gold
+ and cleft in two like a pomegranate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly we wound up towards the village, the wind, or rather hurricane,
+ gathering in force as we went. It was indeed no easy task to get a nearer
+ view of the church; more than once we were compelled to beat a retreat,
+ whilst it seemed really unsafe to linger underneath such a ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine the tower of St. Jacques in the Rue de Rivoli split in two, the
+ upright half standing in a bare wind-swept level, and you have some faint
+ notion of Larchant. On nearer approach such an impression of grandeur is
+ by no means diminished. This magnificent parish church, in part a ruin, in
+ part restored, rather grows upon one upon closer inspection. Reparation,
+ for want of funds, has stopped short at the absolutely necessary. The body
+ of the church has been so far restored as to be fit for use, but its
+ crowning glory, the tower, remains a torso.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The front view suggests no such dilapidation. How long will the shell of
+ that lofty twelfth century tower remain standing? To my mind it hangs over
+ the low, one-storeyed houses at its feet, a veritable sword of Damocles,
+ sooner or later sure to fall with crushing force. The porch shows much
+ beautiful carving, unfortunately defaced, and the interior some perfect
+ specimens of pure Gothic arches, the whole whitewashed and bare as a barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Larchant in the middle ages was a famous pilgrimage, and in the days of
+ Charles IX. a halting stage on the road to Italy. It does not seem to
+ attract many English pilgrims at the present time. Anyhow tea-making here
+ seems a wholly unknown art. In a fairly clean inn, however, a good-natured
+ landlady allowed us to make ourselves at home alike in kitchen and pantry.
+ One of our party unearthed a time-honoured tea-pot&mdash;we had of course
+ taken the precaution of carrying tea with us&mdash;one by one milk and
+ sugar were forthcoming in what may be called wholesale fashion, milk-jugs
+ and sugar-basins being apparently articles of superfluity, and in company
+ of a charming old dog and irresistible kitten, also of some quiet
+ wayfarers, we five-o&rsquo;clocked merrily enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our business at Larchant was not wholly archaeological. Buffeted as we
+ were by the hurricane, we managed to pay a visit in search of eggs and
+ poultry for the table at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If peasant and farming life in France certainly from time to time reminds
+ us of Zola&rsquo;s &ldquo;La Terre,&rdquo; we are also reminded of an aspect which the great
+ novelist ignores. As will be seen from the following sketch sordidness and
+ aspiration oft times, I am almost tempted to say, and most often, go hand
+ in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see one generation addicted to an existence so laborious and material
+ as to have no counterpart in England; under the same roof growing up
+ another, sharing all the advantages of social and intellectual progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far from the church we called upon a family of large and wealthy
+ farmers, owners of the soil they cultivate, millionaires by comparison
+ with our neighbours at Bourron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We arrived in the midst of a busy time, a steam corn thresher plying in
+ the vast farm-yard. The interior of the big, straggling farm-house we did
+ not see, but two aged women dressed like poor peasants received us in the
+ kitchen, a dingy, unswept, uninviting place, as are most farm-house
+ kitchens in France. These old ladies were respectively mother-in-law and
+ aunt of the farmer, whose wife, the real mistress of the house, soon came
+ in. This tall, stout, florid, brawny-armed woman was evidently what French
+ folks call <i>une maîtresse femme</i>, a first-rate housewife and manager;
+ a somewhat awe-inspiring person she looked as she stood before us, arms
+ akimbo, her short coarse serge skirt showing shoes well acquainted with
+ stable and neat-house, one dirty blue cotton apron worn over another
+ equally dirty. Now, my hostess, as I have said, wanted to purchase some
+ poultry for the table, and here comes in the moral of my story. Vainly the
+ lady begged and begged again for a couple of chickens. &ldquo;But we want them
+ for our Parisians,&rdquo; the three farming women reiterated, one echoing the
+ other. &ldquo;Our Parisians, our Parisians,&rdquo; the words were repeated a dozen
+ times. And as was explained to me afterwards, &ldquo;our Parisians,&rdquo; for whom
+ the pick of the poultry yard was being reserved, were the two sons of the
+ rather forbidding-looking matron before us, young gentlemen being educated
+ in a Paris Lycée, and both of them destined for the learned professions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This side of rural life, this ambition, akin to what we see taking quite
+ another form among ourselves, Zola does not sufficiently realize. Shocking
+ indeed were the miserliness and materialism of such existences but for the
+ element of self-denial, this looking ahead for those to follow after. How
+ differently, for instance, the farm-house and its group must have
+ appeared, but for the evident pride and hopes centred in <i>nos Parisiens</i>,
+ who knows?&mdash;perhaps youths destined to attain the first rank in
+ official or political callings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farther door of the smoke-dried kitchen opened on to the farm-yard,
+ around which were stables and neat-houses. In the latter the mistress of
+ the house proudly drew our attention to a beautiful blue cow, grey in our
+ ignorance we had called it, one of a score or more of superb kine all now
+ reclining on their haunches before being turned out to pasture. In front,
+ cocks and hens disported themselves on a dunghill, whilst beyond, the
+ steam corn thresher was at work, every hand being called into requisition.
+ No need here for particulars and figures. The superabundant wealth, so
+ carefully husbanded for the two youths in Paris, was self-evident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tornado, with threatening showers and the sight of a huge tree just
+ uprooted by the road side, necessitated the shortest possible cut home. In
+ fair weather a prolongation of our drive would have given us a sight of
+ some famous rocks of this rocky forest. But we carried home memories
+ enough for one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. &mdash; RECLOSES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This ancient village, reached by the forest, is one of the most
+ picturesque of the many picturesque places hereabouts. Quitting a stretch
+ of pinewood we traverse flat cultivated land, gradually winding up towards
+ a long straggling village surmounted by a lofty church tower of grey
+ stone. On either side of this street are enclosed farm-houses, the
+ interiors being as pictorial as can be imagined. Untidy as are most French
+ homesteads, for peasant farmers pay little court to the Graces, there is
+ always a bit of flower garden. Sometimes this flower garden is aerial, a
+ bower of roses on the roof sometimes amid the incongruous surroundings of
+ pig styes or manure heaps. This region is a petunia land; wherever we go
+ we find a veritable blaze of petunia blossoms, pale mauve, deepest rose,
+ purple and white massed together without order or view to effect. In one
+ of the little fortresses&mdash;for so these antique farmhouses may be
+ called&mdash;we saw a rustic piazza, pillars and roof of rude unhewn stone
+ blazing with petunias, no attempt whatever at making the structure whole,
+ symmetrical or graceful to the eye. It seems as if these homely though
+ rich farmers, or rather farmers&rsquo; wives, could not do without flowers,
+ above the street jutting many aerial gardens, the only touch of beauty in
+ the work-a-day picture. These interiors would supply artists with the most
+ captivating subjects. The women, their skins brown and wrinkled as ripe,
+ shelled walnuts, their head-dress a blue and white kerchief neatly folded
+ and knotted, the expression of their faces shrewd and kindly, all
+ contribute to the charm of the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here as elsewhere the young women and girls affect a little fashion and
+ finery on Sundays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We should not know unless we were told that Recloses was one of the
+ richest villages in these parts. On this Sunday, September 1st, 1901, in
+ one place a steam thresher was at work, although for the most part folks
+ seemed to be taking their ease in their holiday garb. Perhaps the
+ difficulty of procuring the machine accounted for the fact of seeing it on
+ a Sunday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the farm-yards showed a charming menagerie of poultry and the
+ prettiest rabbits in the world, all disporting themselves in most amicable
+ fashion. Here, as elsewhere, when we stopped to admire, the housewife came
+ out, pleased to interchange a few words with us. The sight of Recloses is
+ not, however, its long line of little walled-in farm-houses, but the
+ curious rocky platform at the end of the village, perforated with holes
+ always full of water, and the stupendous view thence obtained&mdash;an
+ ocean of sombre green unrelieved by a single sail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already the vast panorama of forest shows signs of autumn, light touches
+ of yellow relieving the depths of solemn green. On such a day of varied
+ cloudland the perspective must be quite different, and perhaps even more
+ beautiful than under a burning cloudless sky, no soft gradations between
+ the greens and the blues. The little pools or perforations breaking the
+ surface of the broad platform, acres of rocks, are, I believe, unexplained
+ phenomena. In the driest season these openings contain water, presumably
+ forced upwards from hidden springs. The pools, just now covered with green
+ slime, curiously spot the grey surface of the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, leaving the world of forest to our right, we continue our journey in
+ the direction of Chapelle la Reine, we overlook a vast plain the
+ population of which is very different from that of the smiling fertile
+ prosperous valley of the Loing. This plain, extending to Étampes and
+ Pithiviers, might, I am told, possibly have suggested to Zola some scenes
+ and characters of &ldquo;La Terre.&rdquo; A French friend of mine, well acquainted
+ with these parts, tells me that at any rate there, if anywhere, the great
+ novelist might have found suggestions for such a work. The soil is arid,
+ the cultivation is primitive in the extreme and the people are rough and
+ uncouth. The other day an English resident at Marlotte, when cycling among
+ these villages of the plain inquired his way of a countryman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not a Frenchman?&rdquo; quoth the latter before giving the desired
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No I am not&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not an American?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I am an Englishman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; was the answer, &ldquo;I smelt you out sure enough&rdquo; (<i>Je vous ai bien
+ senti</i>). Whereupon he proceeded to put the wayfarer on his right road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a rule French peasants are exceedingly courteous to strangers, but
+ these good people of the plain seldom come in contact with the tourist
+ world, their country not being sufficiently picturesque even to attract
+ the cyclist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curious thirteenth-century church of Recloses had long been an art
+ pilgrimage. It contains, or at least should contain, some of the most
+ wonderful wood carvings in France; figures and groups of figures highly
+ realistic in the best sense of the word. These sculptures, unfortunately,
+ we were not able to inspect a second time; exhibited in the Paris
+ Exhibition they had not yet been replaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a beautiful drive from Recloses to Bourron by the Croix de Saint
+ Hérem. A little way out of the village we came upon a pretty scene,
+ people, in family groups, playing croquet under the trees. Dancing also
+ goes on in summer as in the olden time. It was curious as we drove along
+ to note the behaviour of my friend&rsquo;s dog: it never for a moment closed its
+ eyes, and yet there was nothing to look at but avenue after avenue of
+ trees. What could the little animal find so fascinating in the somewhat
+ monotonous sight? A friend at home assures me that a pet of her own
+ enjoyed drives from purely snobbish motives; his great gratification
+ arising from the sense of superiority over fellow dogs compelled to trudge
+ on foot. But in these woodland solitudes there was no room for such a
+ sentiment, not a dog being visible, only now and then a cyclist flashing
+ by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no more splendid cycling ground in the world than this forest of
+ Fontainebleau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakespeare says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;This guest of summer,
+ The temple-haunting martlet, does approve
+ By his loved mansionry that the heaven&rsquo;s breath
+ Smells wooingly here: no jutty frieze, buttress,
+ Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made
+ His pendent bed, and procreant cradle: Where they
+ Most breed and haunt, I have observed the air
+ Is delicate.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ About this time at Bourron the village street was alive with swallows
+ preparing, I presume, for departure southwards. A beautiful sight it was
+ to see these winged congregations evidently concerting their future
+ movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another feature to be mentioned is the number of large handsome moths
+ frequenting these regions. One beautiful creature as large as a swallow
+ used to fly into our dining room every evening for warmth; fastening
+ itself to the wall it would there remain undisturbed until the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I finish these reminiscences of Bourron by the following citation from
+ Balzac&rsquo;s &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët&rdquo;:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On entering Nemours at five o&rsquo;clock in the morning, Ursule woke up
+ feeling quite ashamed of her untidiness, and of encountering Savinien&rsquo;s
+ look of admiration. During the time that the diligence took to come from
+ Bouron (<i>sic</i>), where it stopped a few minutes, the young man had
+ observed Ursule. He had noted the candour of her mind, the beauty of her
+ person, the whiteness of her complexion, the delicacy of her features, the
+ charm of the voice which had uttered the short and expressive sentence, in
+ which the poor child said everything, while wishing to say nothing. In
+ short I do not know what presentiment made him see in Ursule the woman
+ whom the doctor had depicted, framed in gold, with these magic words:&mdash;&lsquo;Seven
+ to eight hundred thousand francs!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holiday tourists in these parts cannot do better than put this love-story
+ in their pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; NEMOURS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who knows Nemours,&rdquo; wrote Balzac, &ldquo;knows that nature there is as
+ beautiful as art,&rdquo; and again he dwells upon the charm of the sleepy little
+ town memorialized in &ldquo;Ursule Mirouët.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The delicious valley of Loing indeed fascinated Balzac almost as much as
+ his beloved Touraine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his recently published letters to Madame Hanska have shown us, several
+ of his greatest novels were written in this neighbourhood, whilst in the
+ one named above we have a setting as striking as that of &ldquo;Eugenie Grandet&rdquo;
+ or &ldquo;Béatrix.&rdquo; A ten minutes&rsquo; railway journey brings us to Nemours, one of
+ the few French towns, by the way, in which Arthur Young lost his temper.
+ Here is his own account of the incident:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sleep at Nemours, where we met with an innkeeper who exceeded in knavery
+ all we had met with, either in France or Italy: for supper, we had a <i>soupe
+ maigre</i>, a partridge and a chicken roasted, a plate of celery, a small
+ cauliflower, two bottles of poor <i>vin du Pays</i>, and a dessert of two
+ biscuits and four apples: here is the bill:&mdash;Potage 1 liv. 10f.&mdash;Perdrix
+ 2 liv. 10f.&mdash;Poulet 2 liv.&mdash;Céleri 1 liv. 4f.&mdash;Choufleur 2
+ liv.&mdash;Pain et dessert 2 liv.&mdash;Feu et appartement 6 liv.&mdash;Total
+ 19 liv. 8f. Against so impudent an extortion we remonstrated severely but
+ in vain. We then insisted on his signing the bill, which, after many
+ evasions, he did, <i>à l&rsquo;étoile, Foulliare</i>. But having been carried to
+ the inn, not as the star, but the <i>écu de France</i>, we suspected some
+ deceit: and going out to examine the premises, we found the sign to be
+ really the <i>écu</i>, and learned on enquiry that his own name was Roux,
+ instead of <i>Foulliare</i>: he was not prepared for this detection, or
+ for the execration we poured on such infamous conduct; but he ran away in
+ an instant and hid himself till we were gone. In justice to the world,
+ however, such a fellow ought to be marked out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I confess I do not myself find such charges excessive. From a very
+ different motive, Nemours put me as much out of temper as it had done my
+ great predecessor a hundred years before. Will it be believed that a town
+ memorialized by the great, perhaps <i>the</i> greatest, French novelist,
+ could not produce its title of honour, in other words a copy of &ldquo;Ursule
+ Mirouët&rdquo;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This town of 4,000 and odd souls and chef-lieu of department does not
+ possess a bookseller&rsquo;s shop. We did indeed see in a stationer&rsquo;s window one
+ or two penny books, among these an abridged translation of &ldquo;Uncle Tom&rsquo;s
+ Cabin.&rdquo; But a friendly wine merchant, who seemed to take my reproaches
+ very much to heart, assured us that in the municipal library all Balzac&rsquo;s
+ works were to be found, besides many valuable books dealing with local
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold comfort this for tourists who want to buy a copy of the Nemours
+ story! As we stroll about the grass-grown streets, we feel that railways,
+ telephones and the rest have very little changed Nemours since Balzac&rsquo;s
+ descriptions, written three-quarters of a century ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet and pastoral surroundings of the place are in strong contrast
+ with the sordid next-of-kin peopling the pages of his romance. Beyond the
+ fine old church of rich grey stone, you obtain as enchanting a view as the
+ valley of the Loing can show, a broad, crystal-clear river winding amid
+ picturesque architecture, richest and most varied foliage, ash and weeping
+ willow mingling with deeper-hued beech and alder. It is difficult, almost
+ impossible, to describe the charm of this riverside scenery. In one
+ passage of his novel, Balzac compares the view to the scenery of an opera,
+ and in very truth every feature forms a whole so harmonious as to suggest
+ artistic arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature and accident have effected the happiest possible combination of
+ wood, water and building stone. Nothing is here to mar the complete
+ picture. Grandly the cathedral-like church and fine old château stand out
+ to-day against the brilliant sky, soft grey stone and dark brown making
+ subdued harmonies. Formerly Nemours was surrounded by woods, hence its
+ name. People are said to attain here a very great age, life being tranquil
+ and the nature of the people somewhat lethargic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst the more energetic inhabitants are a lady dentist and her sister,
+ who between them do a first rate business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French peasants never dream of indulging in false teeth; such an idea
+ would never enter the head of even the richest. But an aching tooth
+ interferes with the labours of the farm, and must be got rid of at any
+ cost. This young lady <i>chirurgien et dentiste</i>, such is the name
+ figuring on her door plate, is not only most expert in using the forceps,
+ but is attractive and pretty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her charges are two francs for a visit or operation; in partnership with
+ her is a sister who does the accounts, and as nuns and sisters of charity
+ unprovided with certificates are no longer allowed to draw teeth, act as
+ midwives and cut off limbs, country doctors and dentists of either sex
+ have now a fair chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No town in this part of France suffered more during the German invasion.
+ The municipal authorities had at first decided upon making a bold stand,
+ thus endeavouring to check the enemy&rsquo;s advance on Paris. Differences of
+ opinion arose, prudential counsels prevailed, and it was through a
+ mistaken order that a Prussian detachment was attacked near the town. The
+ consequences were appalling. The station was burned to the ground,
+ enormous contributions in money and material were exacted from the town,
+ some of the authorities were made to travel on the railways with the
+ invaders, and others were carried off to remote fortresses of Brandenburg
+ and there kept as prisoners for nine months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The account of all these incidents, written by a victim, may be consulted
+ in a volume of the town library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If people frequently attain the age of a hundred in Nemours, as I was
+ assured, it is rather due to placid temperament than to intellectual
+ torpor. The town possesses learned societies, and a member of its
+ archaeological association has published a book of great local interest
+ and value, viz:&mdash;&ldquo;Nemours, Temps Géologiques, Temps Préhistoriques,
+ Temps Historiques, par E. Doigneau, Membre de la Société Archéologique de
+ Seine-et-Marne, Ancien Vice Président de la section de Fontainebleau,
+ Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, although this neighbourhood has offered a rich field for
+ prehistoric research, Nemours as yet possesses no museum, I do verily
+ believe the first French town of any size I have ever found in France
+ without one at least in embryo. For the cyclist the run from Bourron to
+ Nemours is delightful, on the hottest day in the year spinning along broad
+ well-wooded roads, with lovely perspectives from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. &mdash; LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From Bourron, in September, 1900, I journeyed with a friend to La Charité,
+ a little town four hours off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is ever with feelings of pleasurable anticipation that I approach any
+ French town for the first time. The number of these, alas! now being few,
+ I have of late years been compelled to restrain curiosity, leaving one or
+ two dreamed-of spots for the future, saying with Wordsworth:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Should life be dull and spirits low,
+ &lsquo;Twill soothe us in our sorrow,
+ That earth has something yet to show,
+ The bonny holms of Yarrow.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ La Charité, picturesque of the picturesque&mdash;according to French
+ accounts, English, we have none&mdash;for many years had been a Yarrow to
+ me, a reserve of delight, held back from sheer Epicureanism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As, on the 12th of September, the cumbersome old omnibus rattled over the
+ unpaved streets, both to myself and fellow traveller came a feeling of
+ disenchantment. We had apparently reached one more of those sleepy little
+ <i>chefs-lieux</i> familiar to both, places of interest certainly, the
+ sleepiest having some architectural gem or artistic treasure. But here was
+ surely no Yarrow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later we discovered our error. Hardly had we reached our
+ rooms in the more than old-fashioned Hôtel du Grand Monarque, than from a
+ side window, we caught sight of the Loire; so near, indeed, lay the
+ bright, blue river, that we could almost have thrown pebbles into its
+ clear depths; quitting the hotel, half a dozen steps, no more were needed,
+ an enchanting scene burst upon the view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most beautiful is the site of La Charité, built terrace-wise, not on the
+ skirts but on the very hem of the Loire, here no revolutionary torrent,
+ sweeping away whole villages, leaving only church steeples visible above
+ the engulfing waters, as I had once seen it at Nantes, but a broad,
+ smooth, crystal expanse of sky-blue. Over against the handsome stone
+ bridge to-day having its double in the limpid water, we see a little
+ islanded hamlet crowned with picturesque church tower; and, placing
+ ourselves midway between the town and its suburban twin, obtain vast and
+ lovely perspectives. Westward, gradually purpling as evening wears on,
+ rises the magnificent height of Sancerre, below, amid low banks bordered
+ with poplar, flowing the Loire. Eastward, looking towards Nevers, our eyes
+ rest on the same broad sheet of blue; before us, straight as an arrow,
+ stretches the French road of a pattern we know so well, an apparently
+ interminable avenue of plane or poplar trees. The river is low at this
+ season, and the velvety brown sands recall the sea-shore when the tide is
+ out. Exquisite, at such an hour are the reflections, every object having
+ its mirrored self in the transparent waves, the lights and shadows of
+ twilight making lovely effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As is the case with Venice, La Charité should be reached by river, and a
+ pity it seems that little steamers do not ply between all the principal
+ towns on the Loire. How enchanting, like the immortal Vert-Vert, of
+ Gresset&rsquo;s poem, to travel from Nevers to the river&rsquo;s mouth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I had headed this paper merely with the words &ldquo;La Charité,&rdquo; I should
+ surely be supposed to treat of some charitable institution in France, or
+ of charity as worked out in the abstract, for this first of Christian
+ virtues has given the place its name, presumably perpetuating the
+ charitableness of its abbatial founders. Just upon two thousand years ago,
+ some pious monks of the order of Cluny settled here, calling their
+ foundation La Charité. Gradually a town grew around the abbey walls, and
+ what better name for any than this? So La Charité it was in early feudal
+ times, and La Charité it remains in our own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place itself is as antiquated and behindhand as any I have seen in
+ France, which is saying a good deal. A French gentleman, native of these
+ parts, told me that in his grandfather&rsquo;s time our Hôtel du Grand Monarque
+ enjoyed a fine reputation. In many respects it deserves the same still,
+ excellent beds, good cooking, quietude and low prices not being so common
+ as they might be in French provincial inns. The house, too, is curious,
+ what with its spiral stone staircases, little passages leading to one room
+ here, to another there&mdash;as if in former days travellers objected to
+ walls that adjoined those of other people&mdash;and unaccountable levels,
+ it is impossible to understand whether you were on the first floor or the
+ second floor, house-top, or basement. Our bedrooms, for instance, reached
+ by one of the spiral stone staircases just named never used by myself
+ without apprehension, landed us on the edge of a poultry yard; I suppose a
+ wide bit of roof had been converted into this use, but it was quite
+ impossible to make out any architectural plan. These rooms adjoining this
+ <i>basse-cour</i>, hens and chicks would enter unceremoniously and pick up
+ the crumbs we threw to them. Fastidious tourists might resent so primitive
+ a state of things, the hotel, I should say, remaining exactly what it was
+ under the Ancien Régime. The beauty and interest of various kinds around,
+ more than make up for small drawbacks. Here the archaeologist will not
+ grudge several days. Ruined as it is, the ancient abbey may be
+ reconstructed in the mind&rsquo;s eye by the help of what we see before us. The
+ fragments of crumbling wall, the noble tower and portal, the delicately
+ sculptured pillars, cornices, and arches, enable us to build up the whole,
+ just as Cuvier made out an entire skeleton from the examination of a
+ single bone. These grand architectural fragments have not been neglected
+ by the learned. Unfortunately, and exceptionally, La Charité possesses
+ neither public library nor museum, but at Nevers the traveller would
+ surely find a copy of Prosper Merimée&rsquo;s &ldquo;Notes Archéologiques&rdquo; in which is
+ a minute account of these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alike without and within the ruins show a medley of styles and richest
+ ornamentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superb north-west tower, that forms so striking an object from the
+ river, is said to be in the Burgundian style; rather should we put it
+ after a Burgundian style, so varied and heterogeneous are the churches
+ coming under this category. Again, the guide books inform us that the open
+ space between this tower and the church was occupied by the narthex, a
+ vast outer portico of ancient Burgundian churches used for the reception
+ of penitents, catechumens, and strangers. All interested in ecclesiastical
+ architecture should visit the abbey church of Vézelay, which possesses a
+ magnificent narthex of two storeys, restored by the late Viollet le Duc.
+ Vézelay, by the way, may be easily reached from La Charité.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the elaborate sculptures of this grand tower, will be noted the
+ superb colour of the building stone, carved out of deep-hued gold it looks
+ under the burning blue sky. And of a piece are arch, portico and column,
+ one and all helping us to reconstruct the once mighty abbey, home of a
+ brotherhood so powerful as to necessitate disciplinary measures on the
+ part of the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior of the church shows the same elaborateness of detail, and the
+ same mixture of styles, the Romanesque-Burgundian predominating, so, at
+ least, affirm authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idler and lover of the picturesque will not find time hang heavy on
+ his hands here. Very sweet are the riverside views, no matter on which
+ side we obtain them, and the quaintest little staircases of streets run
+ from base to summit of the pyramidally-built town. A climb of a quarter of
+ an hour takes us to an admirable coign of vantage just above the abbey
+ church, and commanding a view of Sancerre and the river. That little town,
+ so splendidly placed, is celebrated for its eight months&rsquo; defence as a
+ Huguenot stronghold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Charité, with most mediaeval towns, was fortified, one old city gate
+ still remaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day, as when that charming writer, Émile Montégut visited the place
+ more than a generation ago, the townspeople ply their crafts and domestic
+ callings abroad. In fine weather, no work that can possibly be done in the
+ open air is done within four walls. Another curious feature of these
+ engaging old streets, is the number of blacksmiths&rsquo; shops. It would seem
+ as if all the horses, mules, and donkeys of the Nièvre were brought hither
+ to be shod, the smithy fires keeping up a perpetual illumination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third and still more noteworthy point is the infrequency&mdash;absence,
+ I am inclined to say&mdash;of cabarets. Soberest of the sober, orderliest
+ of the orderly, appear these good folks of La Charité, les Caritates as
+ they are called, nor, apparently, has tradition demoralised them. One
+ might expect that a town dedicated to the virtue of almsgiving would
+ abound in beggars. Not one did we see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. &mdash; POUGUES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If an ugly name could kill a place, Pougues must surely have been ruined
+ as a health resort centuries ago. Coming, too, after that soothing,
+ harmoniously named La Charité, could any configuration of letters grate
+ more harshly on the ear? Truth to tell, my travelling companion and myself
+ had a friendly little altercation about Pougues. It seemed impossible to
+ believe pleasant things of a town so labelled. But the reputation of
+ Pougues dates from Hercules and Julius Caesar, both heroes, it is said,
+ having had recourse to its mineral springs! Coming from legend to history,
+ we find that Pougues, or, at least, the waters of Pougues, were patronised
+ by the least objectionable son of Catherine de Medicis, Henri II. of
+ France and runaway King of Poland. Imputing his disorders to sorcery, he
+ was thus reassured by a sensible physician named Pidoux: &ldquo;Sire, the malady
+ from which you suffer is due to no witchcraft. Lead a quiet life for ten
+ weeks, and drink the water of Pougues.&rdquo; The best king France ever had,
+ namely, the gay Gascon, and after him Louis XIII., by no means one of the
+ worst, had recourse to Pougues waters; also that arch-voluptuary and
+ arch-despot, the Sun-King, who imagined that even syntax and prosody must
+ bow to his will. {Footnote: One day the young king ordered his carriage,
+ saying, &ldquo;<i>mon</i> carrosse,&rdquo; instead of &ldquo;<i>ma</i> carrosse,&rdquo; the French
+ word being derived from the Italian feminine, <i>carrozza</i>. On being
+ gently corrected, the king flew into a passion, declaring that masculine
+ he had called it, and masculine it should remain, which it has done to
+ this day, so the story runs. Let the Republic look to it!} And Madame de
+ Sevigné&mdash;for whom, however, I have scant love, for did she not hail
+ the revocation of the Edict of Nantes?&mdash;Madame de Sevigné honoured
+ Pougues with an epigram.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second Purgatory she styled the douches, and, doubtless, in those
+ non-washing days, a second Purgatory it would have been to most folks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Pougues, nevertheless, we went, and if these notes induce the more
+ enterprising of my countrypeople to do the same next summer, they are not
+ likely to repent of the experiment. Never, indeed, was a little Eden of
+ coolness, freshness, and greenery more abominably used by its sponsors,
+ whilst the name of so many French townlings are a poem in themselves!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a view of sky blue waters and smooth brown sands we were transported
+ to a world of emerald green verdure and richest foliage, interpenetrated
+ with golden light. On this 14th of September the warmth and dazzlingness
+ of mid-summer still reigned at Pougues; and the scenery in which we
+ suddenly found ourselves, bosquets, dells, and glades, with all the charm
+ but without the savageness of the forest, recalled the loveliest lines of
+ the laziest poet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Was naught around but images of rest,
+ And flowery beds, that slumberous influence kest{1},
+ Sleep-soothing groves and quiet lawns between,
+ From poppies breathed; and beds of pleasant green.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ {Footnote 1: Cast}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A drive of a few minutes had landed us in the heart of this little
+ Paradise, baths and Casino standing in the midst of park-like grounds.
+ Apparently Pougues, that is to say, the Pougues-les-Eaux of later days,
+ has been cut out of natural woodland, the Casino gardens and its
+ surroundings being rich in forest trees of superb growth and great
+ variety. The wealth of foliage gives this new fashionable little
+ watering-place an enticingly rural appearance, nor is the attraction of
+ water wholly wanting. To quote once more a most quotable, if little read,
+ poet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Meantime, unnumbered glittering streamlets played,
+ And hurled everywhere their water&rsquo;s sheen,
+ That, as they bickered through the sunny glade,
+ Though restless still, themselves a lulling murmur made.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ A pretty little lake, animated with swans, varies the woodland scenery,
+ and tropical birds in an aviary lend brilliant bits of colour. The usual
+ accessories of a health resort are, of course, here&mdash;reading room,
+ concert hall, theatre, and other attractions, rapidly turning the place
+ into a lesser Vichy. The number and magnificence of the hotels, the villas
+ and <i>cottages</i>, that have sprung up on every side, bespeak the
+ popularity of Pougues-les-Eaux, as it is now styled, the surname adding
+ more dignity than harmoniousness. One advantage Pougues possesses over its
+ rivals, is position. At Aix-les-Bains, Plombières, Salins, and how many
+ other inland spas, you are literally wedged in between shelving hills. If
+ you want to enjoy wide horizons, and anything like a breeze, you must get
+ well outside the town. Never in hot, dusty, crowded cities have I felt so
+ half-suffocated as at the two first named places. Pougues, on the
+ contrary, lies in a broad expanse of beautifully varied woodland and
+ champaign, no more appropriate site conceivable for the now popular
+ air-cure. &ldquo;Pougues-les-Eaux, Cure d&rsquo;Eau and Cure d&rsquo;Air,&rdquo; is now its proud
+ title, folks flocking hither, not only to imbibe its delicious, ice-cold,
+ sparkling waters, but to drink in its highly nourishing air. The
+ iron-gaseous waters resemble in properties those of Spa and Vichy. From
+ one to five tumblers are ordered a day, according to the condition of the
+ drinker, a little stroll between each dose being advisable. With regard to
+ the air-cure, visitors are reminded that at Pougues they find the four
+ kinds of walking exercise recommended by a German specialist, namely, that
+ on quite level ground; secondly, a very gradual climb; thirdly, a somewhat
+ steeper bit of up-hill; and, fourthly, the really arduous ascent of Mont
+ Givre. In order to entice health-seekers, all kinds of gratifications
+ await them on the summit, restaurant, dairy, reading room, tennis court,
+ and croquet ground, to say nothing of a panorama almost unrivalled in
+ eastern France. We have, indeed, climbed the Eiffel Tower, in other words,
+ are on a level with that final stage from which floats the Tricolour.
+ Looking east we behold the sombre Morvan and Nevers rising above the
+ Loire, whilst westward, beyond the plain and the Loire, may be descried
+ the cathedral of Bourges. How many regions visited and revisited by myself
+ now lie before my eyes as on a map&mdash;the Berri, Georges Sand&rsquo;s
+ country, the little Celtic kingdom of the Morvan, on the borders of which,
+ for so many years, that charming writer, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, made his
+ home; the Nivernais, with its souvenirs of Vert-Vert and Mazarin, or,
+ rather, Mazarin and Vert-Vert, the Department of the Allier made from the
+ ancient province of the Bourbonnais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wanderer in France should never be without his Arthur Young. That &ldquo;wise
+ and honest traveller,&rdquo; of course, had been before us, but travelling in a
+ contrary direction. &ldquo;From the hill that descends to Pougues,&rdquo; he wrote on
+ his way from Nevers to Fontainebleau, in 1790, &ldquo;is an extensive view to
+ the north, and after Pouilly a (<i>sic</i>) fine scenery, with the Loire
+ doubling through it.&rdquo; But the great farmer made this journey in
+ mid-winter, thus missing its charm. And Arthur Young was ever too intent
+ upon crops and roots to notice wild flowers. Had he traversed this region
+ earlier in the year, he might have missed an exquisite feature, namely,
+ the sweeps of autumn crocus. Just now the rich pastures around Pougues, as
+ well as suburban lawns and wayside spaces, were tinted with delicate
+ mauve, the ground being literally carpeted with these flowers. It was as
+ if the lightest possible veil of pale purple covered the turf, the same
+ profusion being visible on every side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One final word about this sweet and most unmusically named place. On no
+ occasion and nowhere have I been received with more cordiality than at
+ dear little Pougues, a place I was told there utterly ignored by my
+ country people. I do honestly believe, indeed, that myself and fellow
+ traveller were the first English folk to wander about those delicious
+ gardens, and taste the incomparable waters, cool, sparkling, invigorating
+ as those of Spa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One enterprising proprietor of an excellent hotel was so anxious to secure
+ an English <i>clientèle</i>, the best <i>clientèle</i> in the world, so
+ hotel keepers aver, that she offered me a handsome percentage on any
+ visitors I would send her. In the most delicate manner I could command, I
+ gave her to understand that my inquiries about Pougues were not made from
+ a business point of view, but that I should certainly proclaim its many
+ attractions on the house-tops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. &mdash; NEVERS AND MOULINS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I found the well-remembered Hôtel de France much as I had left it, just
+ upon twenty years before, every whit as quiet, comfortable, and moderate
+ in price, indeed, one of the best provincial hotels of France. The dear
+ old woman then employed as waitress, had, of course, long since gone to
+ her rest, and the landlord and landlady were new to me. But, the
+ traditions of an excellent house were evidently kept up, accommodation,
+ meanwhile, having been greatly enlarged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A place is like a book; if worth knowing at all, to be returned to again
+ and again. After the first brief visit so many years ago, I wrote, &ldquo;I envy
+ the traveller who for the first time stands on the bridge of Nevers.&rdquo; And
+ more imposing, more exhilarating still, seemed the view from the same spot
+ now; under the brilliant sky, in the clear atmosphere, every feature
+ standing out as in a mosaic proudly dominating all, the Cathedral, with
+ its mass of sombre architecture; stretching wide to right and left, the
+ gay, prosperous-looking city; white villas rising one above the other,
+ hanging gardens and terraced lawns, making greenery and verdure in
+ mid-air. On the occasion of my first visit in August, 1881, the Loire was
+ so low as to appear a mere thread of palest blue amid white sands; at the
+ time I now write of, broad and beautiful it flowed beneath the noble
+ bridge, a deep twilight sky reflected in its limpid waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How well I remember the first sight of this scene years ago! Then it was
+ early morning of market day, and, pouring in from the country, I had met
+ crowds of peasants with their products, the men in blue blouses, the women
+ in neat white coiffes, some bearing huge baskets on their heads, others
+ drawing heavily laden barrows, driving donkey-carts, the piled-up fruit
+ and vegetables making a blaze of colour. For three sous I recorded the
+ purchase of more wild strawberries, peaches, and greengages than I knew
+ what to do with, each grower doing business on his own account, no
+ middleman to share his profits; choicest fruit and vegetables to be had
+ almost for the asking. On this lovely Sunday evening plenty of peasant
+ folk were about, the men fishing in the Loire, the women minding their
+ children under the trees. But I noted here, as elsewhere, a gradual
+ disappearance of the blue blouse and white coiffe. Broadcloth and bonnets
+ are fast superseding the homely, picturesque dress of former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aerial residences just mentioned are characteristic of riverside
+ Nevers. Craning our necks as we strolled to and fro, we remarked how much
+ life in such altitudes must resemble that of a balloon, folks being thus
+ lifted above the hubbub, malodours, and microbes of the human bee-hive
+ below. For my own part I prefer a turnpike level, despite the engaging
+ aspect of those rose-girt verandahs, bowers, and lawns on a level with the
+ cathedral tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevers makes a fine appearance, rising proudly from the Loire,&rdquo; wrote
+ Arthur Young, &ldquo;but on the first entrance it is like a thousand other
+ places.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the indefatigable apostle of the turnip had no time for archaeology on
+ his great tour, or he would have discovered that Nevers possesses more
+ than one architectural gem of the first water. The cathedral certainly,
+ alike without and within, must take rank after those of Chartres, Le Mans,
+ Reims, and how many others! but the exquisite little church of St. Étienne
+ and the Ducal Palace, are both perfect in their way, and will enchant all
+ lovers of harmony and proportion. The first, another specimen of so-called
+ Romanesque-Burgundian, has to be looked for, standing as it does in a kind
+ of <i>cul de sac</i>; the second occupies a conspicuous site, forms,
+ indeed, the centre-piece and crowning ornament of the town. Daintiest of
+ the dainty, this fairy-like Italian palace in the heart of France, reminds
+ us that once upon a time Nevers was the seat of Italian dukes, the last of
+ whom was a nephew of Mazarin. The great Cardinal, &ldquo;whose heart was more
+ French than his speech,&rdquo; and who served France so well, despite his
+ nationality and his nepotism, having purchased the Nivernais of a
+ Gonzague, finally incorporated it into the French crown in 1659.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this day, Nevers remains true to its Italian traditions. Go into the
+ tiniest suburban street, enter the poorest little general shop, and you
+ are reminded of the art that made the city famous hundreds of years ago,
+ an art introduced by a Duke of Mantua, relation of Catherine de Medicis.
+ It was in the sixteenth century, that this feudal lord of the Nivernais
+ summoned Italian potters hither, among these a native of Faenza. Under his
+ direction a manufactory of faïence was established, the ware resembling
+ that of his native city, scriptural and allegorical subjects traced in
+ manganese. The unrivalled blue glaze of Nevers is of later date. Just as
+ Rouen potters were celebrated for their reds, the Nivernais surpassed them
+ in blues. No French or foreign potters ever achieved an azure of equal
+ depth and purity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The golden age of Nevers majolica belongs to that early period, but the
+ highly ornamented faïence now produced in its ateliers, shows taste and
+ finish, and in the town itself may be found charming things as cheap as,
+ if not cheaper than, our commonest earthenware.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I write, I have before me some purchases made at a small general
+ dealer&rsquo;s, a plate, and two small amphora-shaped vases, costing a few sous
+ each. The colouring of this cheap pottery is very harmonious, and the
+ glaze remarkable for its brilliance. The shopwoman, with whom we had a
+ pleasant chat, did not seem astonished at our admiration for her goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sell lots of such things as you have just bought, to folks like you&rdquo; <i>(de
+ votre genre)</i>, she said, &ldquo;strangers who like to carry away a souvenir
+ of the place, and all my ware comes from the same manufacture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day Nevers thrives upon ornamental majolica. A hundred and ten years
+ ago it throve upon plates and dishes commemorating the Revolution. In the
+ upper storey of the Ducal Palace we may read revolutionary annals in
+ faïence, every event being memorialised by a piece of porcelain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curious enough is this record in earthenware, one stormy day after another
+ being thus commemorated; and perhaps more curious still is the evident
+ care with which these fragile objects have been preserved. Throughout the
+ Napoleonic era they might pass&mdash;had not gold pieces then on one side
+ the portrait of &ldquo;Napoleon Empereur,&rdquo; on the obverse &ldquo;République Français&rdquo;?&mdash;but
+ when Louis XVIII was brought back by his foreign friends, how was it that
+ there came no general smashing, a great flinging of revolutionary
+ potsherds to the dunghill? Safe enough now is the Nivernais collection,
+ under the roof of the Ducal Palace, the rude designs and commonness of the
+ ware strikingly contrasted with the exquisite things around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In close proximity to these cheap plates, dedicated to the Phrygian cap
+ and sans-culottism, are the very choicest specimens of Nevers faïence of
+ priceless value. Why the municipality, as a rule so generous towards the
+ public, should thus inconveniently house its treasure, is inconceivable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The museum is reached by a long spiral staircase, without banister or
+ support, and a false step must certainly result in a broken leg, or,
+ perhaps, neck! The room also contains a striking portrait of Theodore de
+ Bèze, the great French reformer, who, then an aged man, penned a letter,
+ sublime in its force and simplicity, to Henry IV., conjuring him not to
+ abandon the Protestant faith. The mention of this fact recalls an
+ interesting experience. I here allude to the incontestable advance of
+ Protestantism in France. The traveller whose acquaintance with the country
+ began a quarter of a century ago, cannot fail to be impressed with this
+ fact. Alike in towns large and small, new places of worship have sprung
+ up, Nevers now possessing an Evangelical church. And good was it to hear
+ the appreciation of the little Protestant community from my Catholic
+ landlady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the Protestants here are worthy of all respect (<i>dignes
+ gens</i>) and the pastor also; I esteem him much.&rdquo; Evidently the
+ Lemaitre-Coppée-Déroulède dictum, &ldquo;Only the Catholic can be called a
+ Frenchman,&rdquo; is not accepted at Nevers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In dazzlingly brilliant weather, and amid glowing scenery, we continued
+ our journey to Moulins, as we travelled by rail, and not by road unable to
+ identify &ldquo;the little opening in the road leading to a thicket&rdquo; where
+ Sterne discovered Maria. Has anyone ever identified the spot I wonder,
+ poplar, small brook and the rest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too soon were we also for &ldquo;the heyday of the vintage, when Nature is
+ pouring her abundance into everyone&rsquo;s lap.&rdquo; For the vintage, indeed, one
+ must go farther. Sterne must have been thinking of Burgundy when he penned
+ that line, or the phylloxera has brought about a transformation, vineyards
+ here being changed into pastures. The scenery of the Allier, like that
+ around Autun, recalls many parts of England. Meadows set around with
+ hedges; little rises of green hill here and there; cattle browsing by
+ quiet streams; just such pictures as we may see in our own Midlands. I
+ well remember a remark of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton on this
+ subject. We were strolling near his home, in the neighbourhood of Autun,
+ one day, when he pointed to the landscape over against us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How like that is to many an English scene,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and maybe it was
+ the English aspect of this region that tempted me to settle here.&rdquo; I had
+ paid Moulins a hasty visit many years before, but, unlike Nevers and so
+ many French towns, the <i>chef-lieu</i> of the Allier does not improve
+ upon further acquaintance. And I surmise, that such is the impression of
+ my country people generally. English travellers must be few and far
+ between at Moulins, or why should the appearance of two English ladies
+ attract so much curiosity? Wherever we went, the good folks of Moulins,
+ alike rich and poor, turned round to have a good look at us, even stopping
+ short to stare. All this was done without any rudeness or remark, but such
+ extraordinary behaviour can only be accounted for by the foregoing
+ supposition. For some reason or other our compatriots do not, like Sterne
+ and Maria go to Moulins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should an essentially aristocratic place be so ill-kept, not to say
+ dirty? The town is no centre of industry. Tall factory chimneys do not
+ disfigure its silhouette or blacken its walls. Handsome equipages enliven
+ the streets. But the municipality, like certain saints of old, seem to
+ have taken vows of perpetual uncleanliness. Alike the scavenger&rsquo;s broom
+ and the dust-cart appear to be unknown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst a riverside walk at Nevers presents nothing but cheerful bustle and
+ an aspect of prosperity, here you approach the Allier through scenes of
+ squalor and torpid neglect. The poorer inhabitants, too, are very
+ un-French in appearance, wanting that personal tidiness characteristic of
+ their country people in general. An aristocratic place, means an
+ Ultramontane place, and every third man you meet in Moulins wears a
+ soutane. What so many curés, Jesuits and Christian Brothers can find to do
+ passes the ordinary comprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However interesting twins may be in the human family, monumental duality
+ is far from successful. Unfortunately for this delightfully picturesque
+ old town, its graceful Cathedral has, in the grand new church of
+ Sacre-Coeur, a double. But&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;As moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ is the second self, the never to be obliterated shadow of the first and
+ far more beautiful church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two towers of equal height, twice two spires like as cherries and in close
+ juxtaposition rise above the town, an ensemble spoiling the symmetry of
+ outline and general effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much better off was Moulins when, instead of four spires, she gloried
+ in two? Then, of a verity, the city would have presented as noble a view
+ as those of La Charité and Nevers from the Loire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient château now used as a prison and the Jacquemart or clock tower
+ are rare old bits of architecture, of themselves worth the journey to
+ Moulins. Jacquemart, it may be here explained, is a corruption of Jacques
+ Marques, the name of a famous Flemish clockmaker who lived in the
+ fourteenth century. Amongst other achievements of this artist is the clock
+ of Nôtre Dame, Dijon, as curious in its way as the still more celebrated
+ cock-crowing time-piece of Strasburg, and declared by Froissart to be the
+ wonder of Christendom. World-wide became the reputation of Jacques
+ Marques, and thus it came about that clock towers generally were called
+ after his masterpieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my former hurried visit to Moulins, as was the case with my
+ predecessor, Arthur Young over a hundred years before, &ldquo;other occupations&rdquo;
+ had &ldquo;driven even Maria and the poplar from my head, and left me no room
+ for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.&rdquo; In other words, I had visited Rome
+ without seeing the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this second, and more leisurely visit, I had ample opportunity of
+ making up for the omission. Truly, the tomb of the last Montmorency
+ deserves a deliberate examination. It is one of the most sumptuous
+ monuments in the world and as a testimony of wifely devotion worthy to be
+ ranked with that of the Carian Queen to her lord, the Mausolus, whose name
+ is perpetuated in the word mausoleum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French history cannot be at everyone&rsquo;s fingers&rsquo; ends, so a word here about
+ the last of the Montmorencys, victim not so much of Richelieu&rsquo;s policy as
+ of a kinsman&rsquo;s meanness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the dashing, devil-me-care, hitherto fortunate Henri de Montmorency,
+ Marshal of France and Governor of Languedoc, plotted against Richelieu or
+ rather against the Royal supremacy, it was mainly at the instigation of
+ Gaston of Orleans. No more abject figure in French annals than this
+ unworthy son of the great Gascon, Henri IV., thus portrayed by one whose
+ tongue was as sharp as his sword: &ldquo;Gaston of Orleans,&rdquo; wrote Richelieu,
+ &ldquo;engaged in every enterprise because he had not the will to resist
+ persuasion, dishonourably drawing back from want of courage to support his
+ associates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the conspiracy of Montmorency, Gaston had played the part of
+ instigator, leaving the other to his fate as soon as the situation became
+ perilous. Every effort was made to save the duke, but in vain, and at the
+ age of thirty-seven he ended a brilliant, adventuresome life on the
+ scaffold at Toulouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thought was uppermost in my mind when, a few years ago, I visited that
+ city, the only French city that welcomed the Inquisition. As I stood in
+ the elegant Capitol, musing on Montmorency&rsquo;s story, it occurred to me how
+ few of us realise what a respecter of persons was French law under the
+ ancien régime. Hard as seems the fate of this dashing young duke, we must
+ remember what would have been his punishment, but for his titles of
+ nobility. Death swift and sudden, in other words, by decapitation, was the
+ choicest prerogative of the nobility; tortures before and after
+ condemnation, breaking on the wheel, burning alive, and other hideous
+ ends, being the lot of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This monument, so noteworthy alike from a historic and artistic point of
+ view, was saved from destruction by ready wit. When, in the ferment of
+ revolution, the iconoclastic spirit had got the upper hand, a citizen of
+ Moulins met a mob, bent on destroying what they supposed to be the tomb of
+ some hated grand seigneur, oppressor of the poor. Following the rabble to
+ the convent, no sooner did he see the mallet and hammer raised than this
+ worthy bourgeois, who himself deserves a monument, shouted, &ldquo;Hands off,
+ citizens! Yonder reposes no aristocrat, but as good a citizen as any
+ man-jack of you, aye, who had the honour of losing his head for having
+ conspired against a King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd melted away without a word, the monument remains intact, and
+ generations have had bequeathed to them an example of what presence of
+ mind may effect, not with nerve, sinew, or bodily prowess, but with the
+ tongue. The Convent of the Visitation, to which Montmorency&rsquo;s widow
+ retired, and in the chapel of which she raised this memorial, is now
+ converted into a Lycée. It is a handsome building and was built by Madame
+ de Chantal, foundress of the Order of Visitadines, or nuns whose office it
+ was to visit the sick. This pious lady, the friend of St. François de
+ Sales, and herself canonised by Pope Benoît XIV., was the bosom friend of
+ Felicia Orsini, Montmorency&rsquo;s wife, who succeeded her as Superior of the
+ convent on her death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even an abbess, who had taken the veil, could not refuse visits, some
+ of which must have been as a second entering of iron into this proud
+ woman&rsquo;s soul. The coward Gaston, when passing through Moulins, sought an
+ interview. Richelieu, also, whose emissary received the following message:
+ &ldquo;Tell your master, that my tears reply for me and that I am his humble
+ servant.&rdquo; Years after, Louis XIV. visited the once beautiful and
+ high-spirited Italian, now an aged abbess occupying a bare cell and from
+ his lips, despot and voluptuary though he was, might always be expected
+ the right word in the right place. &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said, on taking leave, &ldquo;we
+ may learn something here. I need not ask you to pray for the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: TOMB OF MONTMORENCY, MOULINS.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But interest in personalities is leading me from what I have set myself to
+ describe, namely, portraiture in marble. For this magnificent work thus
+ perpetuates the last of the Montmorencys and his wife as they were when
+ separated for ever in their prime. Imposing although the monument is as a
+ whole, these two figures in white marble, standing out against a dark
+ background, engross attention. The entire work covers the wall behind the
+ high altar, the sculptures being in pure white marble, the framework in
+ black. Dismissing the niched Mars and Hercules on the one side, the
+ allegorised Religion and Charity on the other, we study the central
+ figures both offering interest of quite different kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why a dashing soldier and courtier of the Renaissance should be
+ represented in the guise of a Roman warrior, is an anomaly, irreconcilable
+ as that of pagan gods and the personification of Christian attributes here
+ placed vis-à-vis. Perhaps the grief-stricken wife, who was, as it appears,
+ of a highly romantic and adventuresome turn, wished thus to commemorate
+ the heroic qualities of her husband; she might also have wished to
+ dissociate him altogether from his own time, a period of which, in her
+ eyes, he would be the victim. Be this as it may, the Roman undress and
+ accoutrements do not harmonise with a physiognomy essentially French and
+ French of a given epoch. Whilst the interest aroused by the Duchess&rsquo;s
+ effigy is purely artistic, that of her husband excites curiosity rather
+ than admiration. The head is strangely poised, much as if the artist
+ intended to suggest the fact of decapitation; obliquity of vision, a
+ defect hereditary in the Montmorencys, is also indicated, adding
+ singularity. The half-recumbent figure by the Duke&rsquo;s side, is of rare
+ pathos and beauty. Almost angelic in its resignation and religious fervour
+ is the upturned face. The drapery, too, shows classic grace and
+ simplicity, as strongly contrasted with the martial travesty opposite as
+ are the two countenances in expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long will art-lovers linger before this monument raised by wifely
+ devotion, a monument, with so many another, perpetuating rather the
+ devotion of the survivor than claims on posterity of the dead. And let not
+ hasty travellers follow Arthur Young&rsquo;s example, jotting down, after a
+ visit to Moulins, &ldquo;No room for the Tombeau de Montmorenci.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. &mdash; SOUVIGNY AND SENS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A quarter of an hour by rail, an hour and a quarter by road, from Moulins
+ lies Souvigny, the cradle of the Bourbons, and as interesting and
+ delightful a little excursion as travellers can desire. On a glowing
+ September morning the scenery of the Allier looked its very best. Never as
+ long as I live shall I forget the beauty of that drive. Lightest,
+ loveliest cumuli floated athwart a pure, not too dazzlingly blue sky,
+ before us stretched avenue after avenue of poplar or plane trees,
+ veritable aisles of green letting in the azure, reminding me of the famous
+ Hobbema in our National Gallery. At many points the landscape recalled our
+ native land; but for the white oxen of the Morvan, we might have fancied
+ ourselves in Sussex or the Midlands. And cloudage, to borrow an expression
+ of Coleridge, suggested England, too. Clouds and skies of the Midlands,
+ none more poetic or pictorial throughout England seemed here&mdash;those
+ skies above the vast sweeps of undulating chalk having a peculiar depth
+ and tenderness, the clouds a marvellous brilliance, transparence, and
+ variety of form! So beautiful are those cloud-pictures that we hardly
+ needed beauty below. Here on the road to Moulins we had both, the
+ landscape, if not romantic or striking, being rich in pastoral charm.
+ Arthur Young, who looked at every bit of country first and foremost from
+ the farmer&rsquo;s point of view, was so much struck with the neighbourhood of
+ Moulins that, but for the Revolution, he would very probably have become a
+ French landowner. Just eight miles from the city he visited in August,
+ 1789, an estate was offered for sale by its possessor, the Marquis de
+ Goutte. &ldquo;The finest climate in France, perhaps in Europe,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;a
+ beautiful and healthy country, excellent roads, and navigation to Paris;
+ wine, game, fish, and everything appears on the table except the produce
+ of the tropics; a good house, a fine garden, with ready markets for every
+ kind of produce; and, above all the rest, three thousand acres of enclosed
+ land, capable in a very little time of being, without expense, quadrupled
+ in its produce&mdash;altogether formed a picture sufficient to tempt a man
+ who had been twenty-five years in the constant practice of husbandry
+ adapted to the soil.&rdquo; The price of the whole was only thirteen thousand
+ and odd pounds, and the seller took care to explain that &ldquo;all seigneurial
+ rights <i>haute justice</i>&rdquo; (that is to say, the privilege of hanging
+ poachers, and others, at the château gates), were included in the purchase
+ money. But the country was already in a ferment, and had our countryman
+ struck a bargain then and there, the last-named extras would have proved a
+ dead letter. Seigneurial rights were being abolished, or rather
+ surrendered, at the very time that this transaction was under
+ consideration. As Arthur Young tells us, he might as well have asked for
+ an elephant at Moulins as for a newspaper. No one knew, or apparently
+ cared to know, what was taking place in Paris. On asking his landlady for
+ a newspaper, she replied she had none, they were too dear. Whereupon the
+ irate traveller wrote down in his diary: &ldquo;it is a great pity that there is
+ not a camp of <i>brigands</i> in your coffee room, Madame Bourgeau.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This part of France is not a region of prosperous peasant farmers, nor is
+ it a chess-board of tiny crops, the four or five acre freeholds of small
+ owners cut up into miniature fields. I had a long talk with a countryman,
+ and he informed me that, as in Arthur Young&rsquo;s time, the land belongs to
+ large owners, and is still, as in his time, cultivated by <i>métayers</i>
+ on the half-profit system. At the present day, however, another class has
+ sprung up, that of tenant farmers on a considerable scale; these, in their
+ turn, sublet to peasants who give their labour and with whom they divide
+ the profits. Now, the half-profit system does certainly answer elsewhere;
+ in the Indre, for example, it has proved a stepping-stone to the position
+ of small capitalist. Here I learned, with regret, that such is not the
+ case. Land, even in the highly-favoured Allier, cannot afford a triple
+ revenue. In the Indre, on the contrary, there is no intermediary between
+ land-owners and <i>métayers</i>, the former even selling small holdings to
+ their labourers as soon as they have saved a little capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; folks are not prosperous hereabouts,&rdquo; said my informant. &ldquo;There are
+ no manufacturers at Moulins to enrich the people, and, what with high
+ rents and low prices, the half-profit system does not pay. If money is
+ made, it is by the tenant-farmer, not by the <i>métayer</i>.&rdquo; Curious and
+ instructive is the fact that the most Catholic and aristocratic centres in
+ France should often be the poorest; Moulins and the Allier afford but one
+ example out of many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A beautiful drive of an hour and a quarter brought us within sight of
+ Souvigny. Towering above the bright landscape rose the Abbey Church, its
+ sober dun, red and brown hues, the quaint houses of similar colour huddled
+ around it, contrasted with the dazzling brightness of sky and verdure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still more striking the contrast between the pile so majestic and
+ surroundings so homely! Here, as at La Charité, nothing is in keeping with
+ the mass of architecture, which, in its apogee, stood for the town itself,
+ what of town, indeed, there was being the merest accessory, inevitable but
+ unimposing entourage, growing up bit by bit. The present population of
+ Souvigny is something over three thousand, doubtless, as in the case of La
+ Charité, less than that of its former monastery and dependencies. As we
+ wind upwards, thus flanking the town and abbey, we realise the superb
+ position of this cradle and mausoleum of the Bourbons. For Souvigny was
+ both. Two thousand and odd years ago, here, in the very heart of France,
+ Adhémar, a brave soldier, nothing more, became the first &ldquo;Sire de
+ Bourbon,&rdquo; Charles le Simple having given him the fief of Bourbon as a
+ reward for military services, its chief establishing himself at Souvigny,
+ and of course founding a religious house. The Benedictine abbey, being
+ enriched with the bones of two saints, former Abbots of Cluny, became a
+ famous pilgrimage. Adhémar&rsquo;s successors transferred their seat of
+ seigneurial government to Bourbon l&rsquo;Archimbault, but for centuries here
+ they found their last resting-place, and here they are commemorated in
+ marble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indescribably picturesque is this whilom capital of the tiny feudal
+ kingdom; topsy-turvy, higgledy-piggledy, coated of many colours are its
+ zig-zag little streets, one house tumbling on the back of its neighbour,
+ another having contrived to wedge itself between two of portlier bulk, a
+ third coolly taking possession of some inviting frontage, shutting out its
+ fellow&rsquo;s light, air, and sunshine; here, meeting the eye, breakneck alley,
+ there aerial terrace, and on all sides architectural reminders of the
+ Souvigny passed away, the Souvigny once so splendid and important, now
+ reduced to nothingness, as is, politically speaking, the so-called House
+ of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbey Church, like that of La Charité, shows a mixture of many styles,
+ the general effect being magnificent in the extreme. Throughout eastern
+ France you find no more imposing façade. But, as observes M. Emile
+ Montégut, in the work before quoted, the church has been created as Nature
+ creates a soil, each age contributing its layer; Byzantine, Roman, Gothic,
+ each style is here seen, the latter in its purity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the church itself stands taut and trim, a mass of sculptured
+ masonry in rich browns and reds, the interior shows melancholy
+ dilapidation. But, indeed, for the stern lessons of history, how sad were
+ the spectacle of these mutilated effigies in marble, exquisite sculptures
+ when fresh from the artist&rsquo;s hand, to-day torsos so hideously hacked and
+ hewn as hardly to look human! We cannot, however, forget that the history
+ of races, as of nations and individuals, is retributive. When the
+ &lsquo;Roi-Soleil,&rsquo; that incarnation of the Bourbon spirit, was so inflated with
+ his own personality as to forbid the erection of any statue throughout
+ France but his own, he paved the way for the revolutionary iconoclasts of
+ a century later. It was simply a recurrence of the old fatality, the
+ inevitable moral, since History began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For here, defaced to such a point that sculptures they can be called no
+ longer, are memorialised not only Louis XIV.&lsquo;s ancestors, but his
+ offspring, namely, Louise Marie, one of his seven children by Madame de
+ Montespan, all, as we know, with those of Madame de la Vallière,
+ legitimised, ennobled and enriched. Pierre de Beaujeu, husband of the
+ great Anne of France, was also buried here. Anne it was who, on the death
+ of Louis XI., governed France with all her father&rsquo;s astuteness, but
+ without his cruelty, and pleasant and comforting it is to find that Duke
+ Pierre, her husband, seconded her in every way, himself remaining in the
+ background, acting to perfection the difficult rôle of Prince Consort. The
+ sight of these once exquisite marbles may perhaps awaken in other minds
+ the reflection that crossed my own. Heretical as I shall seem, I venture
+ to express the opinion, that in such cases one of two courses are
+ advisable, either the removal of the torsos, or restoration; why should
+ not some genius be able in this field to do what Viollet le Duc has so
+ successfully achieved in another? But for that great architect, the
+ cathedral of Moulins&mdash;and how many other beautiful French churches?&mdash;would
+ long ago have tumbled to pieces, been handed over as storage to corn
+ merchants, or brewers! Is it so much more difficult to restore a marble
+ effigy, whether of human being or animal, than a façade or an altar-piece?
+ If impossible, then, I say, let broken marbles like those of Souvigny be
+ hidden from view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agreeable town of Sens on the Yonne is here described for
+ completeness&rsquo; sake. Although not lying in the Bourbonnais, Sens formed the
+ last stage of our little tour in this direction, a direct line of railway
+ connecting the town with Moulins. What a change we found here! Instead of
+ unswept, malodorous streets, and sordid riverside quarters, all was clean,
+ trim, and cared for, one wholly uncommon feature lending especial charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the tutelar goddess of Sens, benignant genius presiding over the city,
+ is a stream, or rather parent of many streams, that water the streets of
+ their own free will, supplying thirsty beasts with copious draughts in
+ torrid weather, and keeping up a perpetual air of rusticity and coolness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wherever you go you are followed by the musical ripple of these runlets,
+ purling brooks so crystalline that you are tempted to look for
+ forget-me-nots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voluntariness of this street watering constitutes its witchery. Post
+ haste flows each tiny course; not having a moment to spare seems every
+ current. Need we wonder at the fabled Arethusas and Sabrinas of more
+ youthful worlds?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of itself Sens is very engaging. We can easily understand the fact of the
+ late Mr. Hamerton having made his first French home here. In the memoir of
+ her husband, affixed to his autobiography, Mrs. Hamerton gives us
+ particulars, not only of individual, but of super-personal interest. I use
+ the last expression because the idiosyncrasy described is common to most
+ men and women of genius or exceptional talent. The charming essayist then,
+ the art-critic, gifted with so much insight and feeling settled down at
+ Sens we are told, for the purpose of painting &lsquo;commission pictures.&rsquo; His
+ career was to be decided by the brush and not by the pen. The author of
+ &ldquo;The Intellectual Life,&rdquo; with how many other works of distinction, had, at
+ the outset, wholly mistaken his vocation. &ldquo;The first thing considered by
+ Gilbert when he settled at Sens,&rdquo; writes Mrs. Hamerton, &ldquo;was the choice of
+ subjects for his commission pictures, which he intended to paint directly
+ from nature; and he soon selected panoramic views from the top of a
+ vine-clad hill, called Saint Bon, which commands an extensive view of the
+ river Yonne, and of the plains about it.&rdquo; Unfortunately, rather we should
+ say fortunately, anyhow, for the reading world, the &lsquo;commission pictures&rsquo;
+ were declined. The disappointed artist, out of humour with Sens, made a
+ series of journeys in search of an ideal home, the result being that most
+ entertaining and successful book, &ldquo;Round My House,&rdquo; and the final devotion
+ of its author to letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sens might well seem an ideal place of abode to many. Formed from the
+ ancient Province of Burgundy, the Department of the Yonne has the charm of
+ Burgundian scenery, with the addition of a wide, lovely river. All
+ travellers on the Lyons-Marseilles Railway will recall the noble
+ appearance of the town from the railway&mdash;the Cathedral, with its one
+ lofty tower, rising above grey roofs, no factory chimneys marring the
+ outline, and, between bright stretches of country, the Yonne, not least
+ enchanting of French rivers, if not the most striking or romantic, perhaps
+ the sweetest and most soothing in the world. The favourable impression of
+ Sens gained by this fleeting view, is more than justified on nearer
+ acquaintance. The Cathedral, externally less imposing than those of
+ Bourges, Rheims, or even Rodez and Beauvais, is of a piece alike without
+ and within, no tasteless excrescence disfiguring its outer walls, little
+ or no modern tawdriness to be seen inside, an architectural gem of great
+ purity. For the curious in such matters, the sacristy offers many wonders,
+ among others a large fragment of the true cross, presented to Sens by
+ Charlemagne. Less apocryphal are the vestments of our own Archbishop
+ Thomas, alb, girdle, stole, and the rest, all most carefully preserved and
+ exhibited in a glass case. It will be remembered that, when the turbulent
+ Thomas of London, afterwards known as Becket, was condemned as a traitor,
+ he fled to France. &ldquo;This is a fearful day,&rdquo; said one of his attendants on
+ hearing the sentence. &ldquo;The Day of Judgment will be more fearful,&rdquo; replied
+ Thomas. It was not at Sens, however, that the refugee took up his abode,
+ but in the Abbey of St. Colombe, now in ruins hard by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side of the bridge, crowning an islet, stands one of those
+ curious church<i>lets</i>, or churc<i>lings</i> I was about to say, that
+ possess so powerful a fascination for the archaeological mind.
+ Particularly striking was the little Romanesque interior in the September
+ twilight, a picturesque group of Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul,
+ rehearsing canticles with their pupils at one end, the subdued light just
+ enabling us to realise the harmony of proportions. This little church of
+ St. Maurice dating from the twelfth century, partly restored in the
+ sixteenth, must not on any account be missed. Its pretty spire crowns the
+ Isle d&rsquo;Yonne, or island of the Yonne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Late and tired, I arrived, one September evening, at Arcis-sur-Aube,
+ birthplace and home of the great Danton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had brought with me letters of introduction to friends&rsquo; friends, unaware
+ that at such a moment the sign-manual of the President of the Republic
+ himself would hardly have secured me a night&rsquo;s lodging. For at this
+ especial moment the little town, from end to end, was in the possession of
+ the military headquarters of that year&rsquo;s manoeuvres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every private dwelling showed a notice of the officers in command
+ sheltered under its roof. Here and there, the presence of sentinels
+ indicated the location of generals. The hotels were crowded from basement
+ to attic, folks who let lodgings for hire had made bargains long before,
+ whilst the very poorest made up beds, or turned out of their own, to
+ accommodate the rank and file. At the extreme end of the town, close to
+ the ancestral home of the Dantons, stands the straggling old-fashioned
+ Hôtel de la Poste, a hostelry, I should suppose, not in the least changed
+ since the days of the great conventionnel. All here was bustle and
+ excitement. Mine host was spitting game in the kitchen, and could hardly
+ find time to answer my application; soldiers and officers&rsquo; servants,
+ scullions and men of all-work, almost knocked each other down in the
+ inn-yard, the landlady, generally so affable a personage in provincial
+ France, gave me the cold shoulder. I turned out in the forlorn hope of
+ finding a good Samaritan. Of course, to present a letter of introduction
+ under such circumstances, was quite out of the question, my errand would
+ have been the last hair to break the camel&rsquo;s back, final embarrassment of
+ an already overdone hostess. But night was at hand; the last train to
+ Troyes, the nearest town, had gone, no other would pass through
+ Arcis-sur-Aube until the small hours of the morning. Unless I could
+ procure a room, therefore, I should be in the position of a homeless
+ vagrant. Well, not to be dismayed, I set out making inquiries right and
+ left, to my astonishment being rebuffed rather surlily and with looks of
+ suspicion. The fact is, during these manoeuvres, a lady arriving at
+ head-quarters alone is apt to be looked upon with no favourable eye.
+ Especially do people wonder what on earth can bring a foreigner to an out
+ of the way country place at such a time&mdash;she must surely be a spy,
+ pickpocket or something worse!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After having vainly made inquiries to no purpose along the principal
+ street, I turned into a grocer&rsquo;s shop in a smaller thoroughfare; two young
+ assistants were chatting without anything to do, and they looked so
+ good-natured that I entered and begged them to help me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very likely an English hobbledehoy similarly appealed to would have
+ blushed, giggled, and got rid of the stranger as quickly as possible;
+ French youths of all ranks have rather more of the man of the world in
+ them. The elder of the lads became at once interested in my case, and
+ manifested a keen desire to be serviceable. Hailing a little girl from
+ without, he bade her conduct me to a certain Mademoiselle D&mdash;&mdash;
+ who let rooms and might have one vacant. The little maid, fetching a
+ companion to accompany us&mdash;here also was a French trait; whatever is
+ done, must be done sociably&mdash;took me to the address given; the
+ demoiselle in question was, however, not at home, but the concierge said
+ that, another demoiselle living near would probably be able to accommodate
+ me, which she did. Before I proceed with my narrative, however, I must
+ mention the ill fortune that befell my useful little cicerone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On taking leave I had given her half a franc, a modest recompense enough
+ as I thought. The following story would seem to show that the good people
+ of Arcis have not yet become imbued with modern ideas about money, also
+ that they have a high notion of the value of truth. To my dismay I learnt
+ next morning that the poor little girl had been soundly slapped, her
+ mother refusing to believe that she had come honestly by so much money; as
+ my hostess observed, the good woman might at least have waited for
+ corroboration of the child&rsquo;s statement. A box of chocolate, transmitted by
+ a third hand, I have no doubt acted as a consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear kind mademoiselle Jenny M&mdash;&mdash; How warmly she welcomed me to
+ her homely hearth! My little purple rosette, insignia of an officer of
+ Public Instruction of France, proved a bond of union. This excellent woman
+ was the daughter of a schoolmaster who had himself worn the academic
+ ribbon, a French schoolmaster&rsquo;s crowning ambition. He had left his
+ daughter, in comfortable circumstances, that is to say, she enjoyed an
+ annuity of £40 a year, the possession of a large, roomy house, part of
+ which she let, and half an acre of garden full as it could be of flowers,
+ fruit and vegetables. We at once became excellent friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am very sorry that my best bedroom is given up to
+ soldiers, two poor young fellows I took in the other night out of
+ compassion. You can, however, have the little back room looking on to the
+ garden, it is rather in disorder, but you will find the bed comfortable. I
+ cannot offer to do much for you in the way of waiting, having a lame foot,
+ but a woman brings me milk early in the morning and she shall put a cupful
+ outside your door; bread and butter you will find in the little kitchen
+ next to your room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured her that such an arrangement would suit me very well, as I had
+ my own spirit lamp and could make tea for myself; then we went downstairs.
+ The great difficulty that night was to get anything to eat. The soldiers
+ had eaten every body out of house and home, she assured me there was not
+ such a thing as a chop or an egg to be had in the town for love or money.
+ Fortunately, I had the remains of a cold chicken in my lunch basket, and
+ this did duty for supper, my hostess pressing upon me some excellent
+ Bordeaux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we chatted, she mentioned the fact that two or three friends, much in
+ the same situation as herself, occupied the little houses running
+ alongside her garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are all old maids,&rdquo; she informed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old maids,&rdquo; quoth I, &ldquo;how is that? I thought there were no single women
+ out of convents in France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The thing,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;has come about in this way&mdash;we have all
+ enough to live upon, and so many women worsen their condition by marriage,
+ instead of bettering it, that we made up our minds to live comfortably on
+ what we have got, and not trouble our heads about the men. We live very
+ happily together, and are all socialists, radicals, <i>libres penseuses</i>
+ and the rest. We read a great deal, and, as you will see to-morrow, my
+ father left me a good library.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we sat at table in the somewhat untidy kitchen, my fellow guests, the
+ conscripts, came in, they were pleasant, civil young fellows belonging to
+ different classes of life. One was a middle-class civilian from an
+ industrial city of the north, the other a homely peasant, son of the soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These conscripts, however poorly fed in barracks, fare like aldermen
+ during these manoeuvres, everybody giving them to eat and drink of their
+ best. They had just dined plentifully, but for all that, managed to get
+ down a bumper of wine immediately offered by Mademoiselle Jenny; a hunk of
+ Dijon gingerbread they did evidently find some difficulty in getting
+ through. We toasted each other in friendliest fashion, and the civilian,
+ out of compliment to myself, drank to the health of the English army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning I fared no less sumptuously than a soldier during the
+ manoeuvres. A savoury steam had announced game for our mid-day meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said my hostess, as she dished up and began to carve a fat
+ partridge cooked to a turn&mdash;&ldquo;this bird that came so àpropos, is a
+ present from a great-nephew of Danton. He is the <i>juge de paix</i> here
+ and a good neighbour of mine. We will pay him a visit this afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this gentleman, of Danton&rsquo;s home and family, I shall say something
+ later on. We made a round of visits that day, but the <i>juge de paix</i>,
+ who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country
+ in search of more partridges. Other friends and acquaintances we found at
+ home; among these was a retired confectioner, who had once kept a shop in
+ Regent Street, and had told Mademoiselle Jenny that she would be delighted
+ to talk English with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Warmly welcomed I was by the portly, prosperous looking pastry-cook, who
+ was reading a newspaper and smoking a cigarette in a well-furnished,
+ comfortable parlour. But alas! thirty years had elapsed since his
+ departure from England, and during the interval he had never once
+ interchanged a word with any of my country-people. To his intense
+ mortification, he had completely lost hold of the English tongue! Another
+ acquaintance, an elderly woman, who seemed to be living on small
+ independent means, had a curious house pet. This, once a pretty little
+ frisking lamb, had now reached the proportions of a big fat sheep. So
+ docile and affectionate, however, was the animal, and so attached had the
+ good soul become to it, that a pet it seemed likely to remain to the end
+ of its days; the creature followed its mistress about like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little town of Arcis-sur-Aube, like many another, is now deserted by
+ all who can get to livelier and more bustling centres. Tanneries, vest,
+ stocking and glove weaving and stitching, are the only resources of the
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During my stay, I made the acquaintance of a charming family engaged in
+ the latter trade. Stopping one day in front of a weaver&rsquo;s open door to
+ watch him at work, I was cordially invited to enter. The head of the
+ house, one of those quiet, intelligent, dignified artisans so typical of
+ his class in France, was weaving vest sleeves at a hand loom, just as I
+ had seen, at St. Étienne, ribbon weavers pursuing their avocations at
+ home. As we chatted about his handicraft and its modest emoluments, his
+ little son came in from school, a bright lad who, to his father&rsquo;s delight,
+ had lately gained prizes. It is curious that only one part of a vest,
+ stocking or glove is done by a single hand; some goods I found came to
+ this house to be finished and others were sent away to be made ready for
+ sale elsewhere. By-and-by, a pretty, refined girl, the daughter of the
+ house, came in and asked me if I would like to see what she was doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith she took me to a neat, cheerful little room upstairs overlooking
+ a garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a table by the open window was a hand-sewing machine, and her
+ occupation was the ornamental stitching of silk and cotton gloves by
+ machinery. The pay seemed excessively low I thought, I believe something
+ like twopence per dozen pair, but the young machinist seemed perfectly
+ contented and happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is pleasant,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to be able to earn something at home and to
+ live with papa and mamma and my little brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving, with the prettiest grace in the world, she begged my
+ acceptance of a dainty pair of lavender silk gloves knitted by her own
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some day I hope to revisit Arcis-sur-Aube, and meantime I hold occasional
+ intercourse by post with my friends in Danton&rsquo;s town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; ARCIS-SUR-AUBE&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But by far the most interesting acquaintance at this most historic little
+ town was the great-nephew of Danton. Middle-aged, unpretentious of aspect,
+ yet with that unmistakable look partly of dignified self-possession,
+ partly of authority, seldom absent from the French official, I looked in
+ vain for any likeness to the portraits of his great kinsman. Yet perhaps
+ in the stalwart figure, manly proportions and bronzed complexion, might be
+ traced some suggestion of the athlete, the strong swimmer, the bold
+ sportsman, whose mighty voice once made Europe tremble. The brother of
+ this gentleman also lived at Arcis-sur-Aube, but was absent during my
+ visit. The <i>juge de paix</i> and his family were on friendliest terms
+ with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a chat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From him and other residents I gathered some interesting particulars about
+ the Danton family. The great tribune left two little sons, George and
+ Antoine, who grew up and resided in their ancestral home, hiding
+ themselves from the world. Their young step-mother it was whose memory,
+ when on the way to the guillotine, evoked from Danton the only betrayal of
+ personal emotion throughout his stormy career: &ldquo;Must I leave thee for
+ ever, my beloved,&rdquo; then, quickly recovering himself, cried &ldquo;Danton, no
+ weakness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Danton married again and is lost sight of. One of Danton&rsquo;s sisters
+ entered a convent, as it was supposed hoping to expiate by a life given up
+ to prayer the crimes, as she deemed them, of her brother. Meantime,
+ appalled by the shadow of their father&rsquo;s memory, George and Antoine
+ decided to remain celibate, a pair marked out for solitude and obloquy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let the name of Danton perish from the recollection of man,&rdquo; they said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder, however, afterwards acknowledged and, I believe, legitimised a
+ daughter according to the merciful French law. Mademoiselle Danton became
+ Madame Menuel, and, strange as it may seem, at the time of my visit, this
+ direct descendant of Danton was still living. President Carnot had given
+ her a small pension in the form of a <i>bureau de tabac</i> at Troyes,
+ where she died in 1896, leaving a son, who some years ago was divorced
+ from his wife, emigrated to Buenos Ayres, and has never been heard of
+ since. It is supposed that he is dead. The two great-nephews have each a
+ son and a daughter living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>juge de paix</i> and his brother are now among the most respected
+ citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their
+ great ancestor. Neither of the pair inhabit the house in which Danton was
+ born, and to which he ever returned with joy and satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sight of Danton&rsquo;s house is sufficient to disprove the calumnies of that
+ noble woman, but inveterate hater, Madame Roland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From her memoirs we might gather that Danton was a poverty-stricken,
+ pettifogging lawyer of the basest class. That Danton&rsquo;s family belong to
+ the well-to-do upper middle ranks, we see from the object lesson before
+ us. At the time of my visit, this large, roomy, well-built house, with
+ coach-house, stables and half-a-dozen acres of garden, orchard and wood,
+ was to let for 700 francs a year. But so low a rent now-a-days is no
+ indication of its value a hundred years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: DANTON&rsquo;S HOME AT ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The owner of the house most kindly showed me over every part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is two-storeyed, plainly but solidly constructed, and evidently
+ arranged, according to French fashion, for a combined tenancy. Two or
+ three families could here well be accommodated under the same roof, each
+ having separate establishments. I found myself in a covered carriageway,
+ cool dark corridors leading to outhouses and stables, a wide staircase
+ with handsome oak balustrade to upstair kitchen and bed-chambers, on
+ either side of the ground floor were spacious salon and dining room,
+ fronting town and river, water-mills and quays. In the vast kitchen was an
+ enormous chopping block, suggestive of large family joints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My kind cicerone allowed me to linger in Danton&rsquo;s bed-chamber. I now
+ looked out from the window at which the fallen leader was often seen by
+ his townsfolk during the last days of his stormy career. In his night-cap
+ the colossal figure might be descried gazing out into the night, as if
+ peering into futurity, trying to read the future. Did he perhaps from time
+ to time waver in his decision to abide his doom? We know that again and
+ again his friends urged him to seek safety in flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does a man carry his country on the sole of his shoe?&rdquo; he retorted
+ fiercely, but it may well be that he here envied weaker men. Danton&rsquo;s
+ character was thoroughly French. His ambition was as he said to retire to
+ Arcis-sur-Aube and there plant cabbages. A devoted son, husband and
+ father, his affections were also centred upon others not of his blood and
+ name. He tenderly loved his old nurse, and left her a small pension.
+ Within the last thirty years, thanks to M. Aulard and his collaborators,
+ the history of the Revolution has been written anew, or rather for the
+ first time. The gigantic figure of Danton stands forth to-day in its true
+ light, as the saviour of France from the fate of Poland, and as a founder
+ of the democratic idea. He succumbed less because he was a rival of
+ Robespierre than because he was a friend of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would rather be guillotined than guillotine,&rdquo; he repeated, and it was
+ mainly his effort to stay the Terror that made him its victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The study adjoining contained that suggestive library of English, Spanish,
+ Italian, and ancient classics of which his biographers have given us a
+ catalogue, but which are now, alas! dispersed for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house stands conspicuous, rearing a proud front to the world, if world
+ could be used appropriately of so quiet, humdrum a little place. A few
+ hundred yards off we reach the Church, Hôtel de Ville and open square. In
+ 1886, a monument to Danton was inaugurated here with much ceremony. A
+ bronze statue represents the great tribune in the fiery attitude of an
+ orator, pronouncing his immortal phrase:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>&ldquo;De l&rsquo;audace, encore de l&rsquo;audace, toujours de l&rsquo;audace!&rdquo;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arcis-sur-Aube is a little town of three thousand souls, within an hour&rsquo;s
+ railway journey from Troyes. The river Aube (Alba), so called from its
+ silveriness flows by Danton&rsquo;s house. In his time and up to the opening of
+ the railways the place was a port of some importance. Boats and barges
+ carried goods to Troyes, Bar-sur-Aube and other towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of late years Arcis has been partially surrounded with pleasant shady
+ walks greatly appreciated by the townsfolk. Regretfully I quitted my
+ circle of acquaintances here, little dreaming under what interesting
+ circumstances I should next meet Danton&rsquo;s great-nephew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. &mdash; RHEIMS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The grandest of all the grand cathedrals in France has been so fully
+ described elsewhere, that I will not attempt to do justice to the subject
+ myself. During one of my numerous visits to Rheims, however, it was my
+ good fortune to enjoy a very rare experience. On the occasion of President
+ Faure&rsquo;s funeral, the great <i>bourdon</i> or bell, formerly only tolled
+ for the death of monarchs, was now heard for the second time during the
+ Third Republic. Standing under the shadow of that vast minster the sound
+ seemed to come from east and west, from above and below, dwarfing the hum
+ of the city to nothingness, as if echoing from the remotest corners of
+ France. It was no heroic figure now knelled by the deepest-voiced bell in
+ the country, but in the person of the Havre tanner raised to the dignity
+ of a ruler, was embodied a magnificent idea, the sovereignty of the people
+ and the overthrow of privilege. Never as long as I live shall I forget the
+ boom of that great bell, and long the solemn sound lingered on my ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later the interior of the vast Cathedral echoed with sound
+ almost as overwhelming in its force and solemnity. A grand mass was given
+ in honour of the dead President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the high altar stood a lofty catafalque, the rich purple
+ drapery blazing with gold. The nave was filled with dazzling uniforms and
+ embroidered vestments. In especially reserved seats sat the officers of
+ the Legion of Honour, among these in civilian dress figuring the honoured
+ citizen of Rheims who has ever retained English nationality, Mr. Jonathan
+ Holden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What with beating drums, clashing cymbals, blaring trumpets and pealing
+ organ, the tremendous vault seemed hardly capacious enough for the
+ deafening combination of sound. As a relief came the funeral march of
+ Chopin, the more subdued strains seeming almost inaudible after the tumult
+ of the moment before. Never surely had plebeian requiem so imperial!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rich, artistic and archaeological treasures of Rheims are well known.
+ I will now describe one or two sights which do not come in the way of the
+ tourist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these is the so-called &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; or associated home for
+ people of small means. The handsome building, with its large grounds,
+ accommodating three hundred tenants, is neither a hotel nor a boarding
+ establishment, least of all an almshouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under municipal patronage and support the &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; offers
+ rooms, board, attendance, laundress and even a small plot of garden for
+ the annual sum of £16 to £24 per inmate, the second sum procuring larger
+ rooms and more liberal fare. Personal independence is absolutely
+ unhampered except by the fact that the lodge gate is closed at 10 p.m. As
+ most of the tenants of the home are elderly folks, such a rule is no
+ hardship. One great advantage of the system is the protection thus
+ afforded to single women and old people, and the immunity from household
+ cares. Meals are taken in common, but otherwise intercourse is voluntary.
+ The French temperament is so sociable, however, and chat is such a
+ necessity of existence, that we saw many groups on garden benches, and
+ also in the recreation and reading rooms. When the number of small <i>rentiers</i>
+ is considered, i.e., men and women of the middle-class living upon a
+ minimum income, we can understand the usefulness of this home. I learned
+ that the establishment is self-supporting, the initiatory expense having
+ been borne by the town and philanthropists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We strolled about with one of the managing staff finding the inmates very
+ sociable; one elderly gentleman invited us to sit down in his bit of
+ garden, very proud, as he might well be, of all the flowers he had
+ contrived to crowd into so small a space. We were also welcomed into some
+ of the neat interiors, these varying in size according to the scale of
+ payment. The class profiting by this associated home was evidently that of
+ the small <i>bourgeoisie</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Children there seemed to be none, one and all of the tenants being elderly
+ widows, widowers, bachelors or spinsters. There were, however, a few
+ married couples, who, if they preferred it, could cook their own meals at
+ home. For single, middle-class women here was a refuge answering to the
+ conventual boarding house of the upper classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unmarried women in France are not nearly so numerous as in England, and I
+ must say they may well envy their English and American sisters in
+ spinsterhood. An unmarried French lady belonging to genteel society cannot
+ cross the street unaccompanied till she has passed her fortieth year, nor
+ till then may she open the pages of Victor Hugo or read a newspaper. Even
+ in this &ldquo;Maison de Retraite&rdquo; special provision was made for the privacy of
+ single ladies; whether they liked it or not they were expected to eat in a
+ separate dining room, and meet for social purposes in a separate salon. As
+ there is no limit to the emotional period and the age of sentiment,
+ perhaps these safeguards of propriety are not wholly superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the economy of such an arrangement is very great. Think of a
+ respectable fairly-educated young woman getting what good old John Bunyan
+ calls &ldquo;harbour and good company,&rdquo; in other words, all the other
+ necessaries of life, with society into the bargain, for £16 a year! The
+ attendance is of course somewhat rough and ready. We saw a stalwart,
+ rough-haired, rather masculine-looking female setting one of the
+ dinner-tables with a clatter that would drive the fastidious to
+ distraction. But the good soul had evidently her heart in her work, and I
+ dare aver that single-handed she got through as much as three English
+ housemaids with ourselves. Would such a scheme answer in England? I doubt
+ it. The Anglo-Saxon character is the reverse of sociable, and class
+ distinctions are so in-rooted in the English nature that it would be very
+ difficult to get ten English women together who considered themselves
+ belonging to precisely the same class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Furthermore, are there with us many widows or spinsters of the same class
+ enjoying even such small independent means as the sums above mentioned? In
+ France, teachers, tradeswomen, female clerks and others, by dint of rigid
+ economy, usually insure for themselves a small income before reaching old
+ age. Fortunately habits of thrift are increasing in England, and our women
+ workers have a larger field and earn higher wages. I had also the
+ privilege of seeing the great wool-combing factory of our countryman Mr.
+ Jonathan Holden, for upwards of forty years a citizen of Rheims. This town
+ has been for centuries one of the foremost seats of industry in France.
+ Mr. Holden&rsquo;s chimneys are kept going night and day, Sundays excepted, with
+ alternating shifts of workmen. All the hands employed are of French
+ nationality and&mdash;a fact speaking volumes&mdash;no strike has ever
+ disturbed the amicable relations of English employer and French employed.
+ The great drawback to an inspection of these workshops is the din of the
+ machinery and the odour of the skins. But there is something that takes
+ hold of the imagination in the perfection to which machinery has been
+ carried. As we gaze upon these huge engines, only occasionally touched by
+ a woman&rsquo;s hand, we are reminded of man, the pigmy guiding an elephant. We
+ seem conscious, moreover, of what almost approaches human intelligence, so
+ much of the work achieved appearing voluntary rather than automatic. The
+ skins reach Rheims direct from Australia and are here dressed, cleaned and
+ prepared for working up into cloth. If machinery is brought almost to the
+ perfection of manual dexterousness, human beings attain the precision of
+ machinery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw a neatly dressed girl at work whose sole occupation it was to tie up
+ the wool, now white as snow and soft as silk, into small parcels. The wool
+ already weighed came down by a little trough, and as swiftly and
+ methodically as wheels set in motion, the girl&rsquo;s fingers folded the paper
+ and tied the string. I should not like to guess how many of these parcels
+ she turned off in half a minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; RHEIMS&mdash;(<i>continued</i>).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Rheims possesses a handsome theatre, the acquaintance of which I was
+ enabled to make under exceptional circumstances. At the risk of appearing
+ slightly egotistical, I will here describe an incident which has other
+ than personal interest. My visit to Damon&rsquo;s country, the particulars of
+ which were given in a former chapter, had an especial object, viz., the
+ setting of a novel of my own having the great conventionnel for its hero.
+ The story was dramatised by two French collaborators, one of whom was at
+ that time stage manager of the Grand Theatre, Rheims. What, then, was my
+ delight to see one morning placarded throughout the town the announcement
+ of the Anglo-French play? A few days before the first representation I had
+ witnessed a rehearsal, and as I was guided through the dusky labyrinths of
+ the theatre I could realise the excessive, the appalling, combustibility
+ of such buildings. It is difficult, moreover, for those who have never
+ penetrated into such recesses&mdash;whose only acquaintance is with the
+ representation on the stage&mdash;to imagine how gloomy and sepulchral
+ &ldquo;behind the scenes&rdquo; may appear. However, by-and-by it was all cheerful
+ enough, and the rehearsal, I must say, although of a tragedy, abounded in
+ touches of humour. My friend and myself were accommodated with chairs just
+ in front of the stage near the prompter, a very friendly personage, who
+ was evidently interested in the fact of my presence. The actors and
+ actresses dropped in one by one and we exchanged a cordial handshake.
+ There was nothing theatrical about the dress or manners of these ladies,
+ whose ages ranged from extreme youth to middle age. They all looked
+ pleasant, lady-like, ordinary women, who might have quitted their
+ housekeeping or any other occupation of a domestic nature. The men, too,
+ impressed me agreeably as they greeted myself and their colleagues. Very
+ amusing was the commencement of proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, my children, put yourselves into position,&rdquo; said the stage manager,
+ making corrections or suggestions as he went on; now somebody spoke too
+ loud, and now somebody was too inarticulate, now an arm was held too
+ forward, and now a leg dragged too much. Excessively diverting, also, the
+ dummy show. In one scene of the play, a village schoolmaster is holding a
+ class of little boys and girls. To-day, a row of chairs did duty for the
+ scholars and were duly harangued, catechised, and even admonished with a
+ cane. In another scene, a peasant woman appears with her donkey, to whom
+ she confides a long tirade of troubles, the donkey for the moment being
+ like the showman&rsquo;s hero in the famous story, &ldquo;round the corner.&rdquo; A third
+ and still more amusing piece of dumb show occurred later, when an
+ ex-abbess acting as housekeeper to the village curé, let fall a basket of
+ potatoes which were supposed to roll about the stage. All went well and
+ the prompter, to whom I appealed for an opinion, assured me that I need be
+ under no uneasiness, for the piece would go off like a house on fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of that favourable prognostic an author&rsquo;s first night is always a
+ nervous affair, especially when that author is a foreigner, and her piece
+ a translation from the original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, everything went merry as a marriage bell, my kind friends filled
+ several boxes, and perhaps one of the most interesting incidents of the
+ evening was the fact that just underneath sat Danton&rsquo;s great-nephew with
+ his clerk, who had come from Arcis-sur-Aube expressly for the occasion.
+ Between the acts I went down and chatted with these two gentlemen, also
+ with a French friend who had travelled from Dijon&mdash;a six hours&rsquo;
+ railway journey&mdash;in order to witness the piece. To the best of my
+ knowledge now for the first time Danton figured on the French stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed that the theatre on this especial night was not a
+ crowded house. In the first place, three large soirées, which had been
+ postponed on account of the President&rsquo;s funeral, coincided with the
+ representation. In the second place, as a rule, the wealthier and more
+ fashionable classes do not patronise provincial theatres, especially when
+ residing within easy reach of Paris. However, the pit and gallery were
+ packed, and loud was the applause with which the appearance of Danton in a
+ blue tail coat, top boots and sash, and his vehement utterances were
+ greeted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had never crossed my mind that under such circumstances an author would
+ be called for; when, indeed, at the close of the piece, cries of &ldquo;Auteur!
+ auteur!&rdquo; were heard throughout the theatre, my friends begged me to show
+ myself. Which, proudly enough, I did, first saluting the sovereign people
+ in the gallery, then bowing less beamingly to the scantier audience in the
+ boxes, finally acknowledging the acclamations from the pit. If &ldquo;Danton à
+ Arcis&rdquo; brought its author neither fame nor fortune, it certainly repaid
+ her in another and most agreeable fashion. Two or three days later, a
+ second representation of the piece at popular prices was given, and upon
+ that occasion the house was full to overflowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grand Theatre, Rheims, is a very handsome building, and like most
+ other provincial houses maintains a company of its own, although from time
+ to time it is visited by the best Paris troupes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet another uncommon recollection of Rheims must here be recorded. In
+ September of last year, I witnessed such a spectacle as my military
+ friends assured me had never before been afforded to the marvel-loving; in
+ other words, the sight of a hundred and sixty thousand men&mdash;a host
+ perhaps more numerous than any ever commanded by Napoleon&mdash;performing
+ evolutions within range of vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By half-past five in the morning I was off from Paris with my host and
+ hostess in their motor car for the Northern railway station. The day of
+ the great review broke dull and grey, and deserted indeed looked the
+ usually gay and lively Paris streets. We reached the station at five
+ minutes to six, i.e., five minutes before the starting of our train, and
+ at once realised the neatness with which the day&rsquo;s programme had been
+ arranged, both by the railway companies and the Government. The tens of
+ thousands of sightseers had been despatched to Rheims by relays of trains
+ during the night, and the station was now kept clear for the numerous
+ specials conveying members of the Senate, the Chamber, and the Press.
+ Here, therefore, was no crowding whatever, only a quiet stream of
+ deputies, wearing their tricolour badges accompanied by their ladies, each
+ deputy having the privilege of taking two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Precisely on the stroke of six, our long and well-filled train consisting
+ of first-class carriages only steamed out of the station, taking the
+ northern route and only making a short halt at Soissons. No sooner had we
+ joined the Compiègne line than we realised the tremendous precautions
+ necessary in the case of visitors so august; double rows of soldiers were
+ placed at short intervals on either side of the railway and detachments of
+ mounted troops stationed at a distance guarded the route. The arrangements
+ for our own comfort were perfect. Our train set us down, not at Rheims,
+ but at Bétheny itself the scene of the review, a temporary station having
+ been there erected. We were, therefore within a hundred yards or so of our
+ tribune, or raised stage, and of the luncheon tents, roads having been
+ laid down to each by the Génie or engineering body. Numbered indications
+ conspicuously placed quite prevented any confusion whatever, and, indeed,
+ it was literally impossible for anyone to miss his way. The only
+ eventuality that could have spoiled everything, wet weather, fortunately
+ held off until the show was over. The review itself was a magnificent
+ spectacle, surely not without irony when we consider that this great
+ military display, one of the greatest on record, was got up in honour of
+ the first Sovereign in the world who had dared to propose a general
+ disarmament! Another line of thought was awakened by the fact of our
+ isolation. The specially invited guests of the French Government upon this
+ occasion numbered three thousand persons, and it seemed that for the Czar,
+ his train, and these, the great show was got up. The thousands of
+ outsiders, sightseers, and excursionists, brought to Rheims by cheap
+ trains from all parts of France, were nowhere; in other words, invisible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether or no such spectators got anything like a view of the evolutions I
+ do not know. I should be inclined to think that from the distance at which
+ they were kept the moving masses were mere blurs and nothing more. From
+ our own tribune, adjoining that of the Presidential party, we commanded a
+ view of the entire forces covering the vast plain, surrounded by rising
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amazing it was to see the dark immovable lines slowly break up, and as if
+ set in motion by machinery, deploy according to orders. The vast plain
+ before us was a veritable sea of men, an army, one would think, sufficient
+ for the military needs of all Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One striking feature of these superb regiments, cavalry as well as
+ infantry, was the excellence of the bands. Never before had I realised the
+ inspiriting thing that martial music might be. Another interesting point
+ was that afforded by the cyclists, several regiments having these newly
+ formed companies. Whenever a flag was borne past, whether by foot or
+ mounted soldier, the cheering was tremendous, but it was reserved for a
+ regiment of Lorrainers to receive a veritable ovation. Still so fondly
+ yearns the heart of France after her lost and mutilated provinces! On the
+ whole, and speaking as a naïve amateur, I should say that no country in
+ the world could show a grander military spectacle. Enthusiasm reigned
+ amongst all beholders, but there was no display of political bias or any
+ discordant note. Cries of &ldquo;Vive la France!&rdquo; were as frequent as those of
+ &ldquo;Vive l&rsquo;armée!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a policeman was to be seen anywhere, the deputies keeping order for
+ themselves. And not always without an effort! People would rise from their
+ seats, even stand on benches, despite the thundered out &ldquo;Remain seated!&rdquo;
+ on all sides. On the whole, and with this exception, nothing could surpass
+ the general good humour. And when the splendid cortege filed by at the
+ close, delight and satisfaction beamed on every face. M. Loubet was so
+ dignified, folks said, Madame Loubet was so well dressed, the deportment
+ of M. Waldeck Rousseau was perfect, M. Deschanel handsomer than ever, and
+ so on, every member of the Czar&rsquo;s, or rather the President&rsquo;s, entourage
+ winning approval. General André and M. Delcassé were very warmly received.
+ The slim, pale, fastidious looking young man in flat, white cap, green
+ tunic, and high boots, seated beside the portly, genial figure wearing the
+ broad Presidential ribbon, set me thinking. How at the bottom of his heart
+ does the Autocrat of All The Russias view these representatives of the
+ great French Republic! How does he really feel towards France, the first
+ nation of the western world to set the example of officially recognised
+ self-government, the initiator of a system as opposed to Russian despotism
+ as is white to black? Whatever may be the secret of this strange
+ Franco-Russian alliance, it is apparently in the interest of peace, and,
+ as such, should be warmly welcomed by all advocates of progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luncheon was superabundant, consisting of wines, cold meat, and bread
+ in plenty. The task of finding refreshment for three thousand people had
+ been satisfactorily solved. The only thing wanting was water. It seems
+ that upon such an occasion no one was expected to drink anything short of
+ Bordeaux, Burgundy, or pale ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the special trains were crowded for the return journey, made by way of
+ Meaux, but everyone made way for everyone, and we reached Paris at eight
+ o&rsquo;clock, almost as fresh and quite as good-humoured as we had quitted it
+ at dawn. If this great review was interesting from one point more than
+ another, it was from the manner in which it displayed the wonderful
+ organising faculty of the French mind. The most trifling details no more
+ than the largest combinations can disconcert this pre-eminently national
+ aptitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first of these places mentioned is a Champenois village twelve miles
+ from a railway station. From the windows of my friends&rsquo; château I look
+ upon a magnificent deer park, where during the oft-time torrid heat of
+ summer delicious shade is to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far away vast forests bound the horizon, to the north a hot open road
+ leading to Brienne-le-Château, where Napoleon studied as a military cadet;
+ eastward, lies varied scenery between Soulaines and Bar-sur-Aube, there
+ woodland ending and the vine country beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one especial visit during September, not even these acres of
+ closely-serried forest could induce more than a suggestion of shadow and
+ coolness. Although screened from view the sun was there. Throughout a vast
+ region&mdash;half a province of woodland&mdash;folks breathed the hot air
+ of the Soudan. The tropic temperature admitted of no exercise during the
+ day, but after four o&rsquo;clock tea we broke up into parties&mdash;drove,
+ rode, strolled, called upon homelier neighbours, visited quaint old
+ churches hidden in the trees or forest nooks, the solitude only broken by
+ pattering of deer and rabbits, or nut-cracking squirrel aloft. Here and
+ there we would come upon huts of charcoal-burner and wood-cutter,
+ gamekeepers and foresters, too, had their scattered lodges; such signs of
+ human habitation being few and far between.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are here in the remnant of the great Celtic forest of Der. The
+ straggling village of Soulaines is one long street, a little stream
+ running behind the picturesque, timbered houses, many of these have outer
+ wooden staircases leading to grange or storehouse. Church and presbytery,
+ convent and Mairie were conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the opposite direction, another church rose above the horizon, the
+ centre of what in France is called not a village but a hamlet. Bare as a
+ barn seen from far and near showed this little church, and we often walked
+ thither for the sake of its picturesque surroundings. The portal of the
+ quaint old building is a mass of ancient sculpture, close round it being
+ grouped a few mud-built, timbered, one-storeyed dwellings all of a
+ pattern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in France are to be found day labourers, only the very poorest,
+ however, being without a cottage, plot of ground, a cow and of poultry
+ their own. Many of their interiors are far neater and cleaner than those
+ of the farm-houses, their occupants not being so tied to the soil from
+ morning to night, not, in fact, incited to Herculean labours by the spur
+ of larger possession. We visited one of the poorest villages hereabouts,
+ of not quite a hundred souls, but of course, provided with church, school
+ and Mairie. Many a group of potato diggers we saw in the exquisite
+ twilight, suggestive of Millet, many a landscape recalling other masters.
+ This handful of woodlanders&mdash;for the village is surrounded by forests&mdash;is
+ perhaps as poor as any rural population to be found throughout France. Yet
+ here surprises await us. Some of the better off hire a little land, keep
+ cows, rear poultry, most likely in time to become owners of a plot. They
+ are paid for harvest work in kind, several we talked to having earned
+ enough corn for the winter&rsquo;s consumption&mdash;as they put it&mdash;our
+ winter&rsquo;s bread. They are a fine, sunburnt, well-formed race and seem
+ cheerful enough. In one of the poorest houses, a huge pipkin on the fire
+ emitted savoury steam, and rows of small cheeses garnished the shelves.
+ Good oak bedsteads, linen presses and old-fashioned clocks were general.
+ Every mantel-piece had its framed photograph and ornamental crockery. New
+ milk was always freely offered us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within the precincts of this hamlet we find ourselves in a bluish-green
+ land of mingled wood and water; above the reedy marsh, haunt of wild fowl,
+ willows grew thick; here and there the water flowed freely, its surface
+ broken by the plash of carp and trout. At this season all hands hereabouts
+ were busy with threshing out the newly garnered corn and getting in
+ potatoes. The crops are very varied, wheat, barley, lucerne, beetroot,
+ buckwheat, colza, potatoes; we see a little of everything. Artificial
+ manures are not much used, nor agricultural machinery to a great extent,
+ except by large farmers, but the land is clean and in a high state of
+ cultivation. Peasant property is the rule; labouring for hire, the
+ condition of non-possession, very rare. And whether the times are good or
+ evil, land dirt cheap or dear, the year&rsquo;s savings go to the purchase of a
+ field or two and, as a necessary consequence, to the consolidation of the
+ Republic and the maintenance of Parliamentary institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will now say something of our neighbours. One of these was the parish
+ priest, who had the care of between six and seven hundred souls. The fact
+ may be new to some readers that a village curé, even in these days,
+ receives on an average little more than Goldsmith&rsquo;s country parson,
+ &ldquo;counted rich on forty pounds a year.&rdquo; This curé&rsquo;s stipend, including
+ perquisites amounted to just sixty pounds yearly, in addition to which he
+ had a good house, large garden and paddock. But compare such a position
+ with that of one of our own rectors and vicars!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Protestant clergy in France are better paid than those belonging to
+ the orthodox faith. Being heads of families, they are supposed, and
+ justly, to need more. Let it not be imagined, however, that the priest
+ receives less under the Republic than under the Empire. But the cost of
+ living has increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there are black sheep in the Romish fold as elsewhere; perhaps
+ even the simplicity, learning and devotion to duty of the individual I
+ here write of, are rare. Yet one cannot help feeling how much more money
+ the Government would have at command with which to remunerate good workers
+ in pacific fields if disarmament were practicable. This excellent priest,
+ like other men of education and taste, would have relished a little travel
+ as much as do our own vicars and curates their annual outing to Norway or
+ Switzerland. What remains for recreation and charity after defraying
+ household expenses and cost of a housekeeper out of sixty pounds a year?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next, let me say a word about the <i>juge de paix</i> in France, as I
+ presume most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than
+ that of a priest. The average stipend of a justice of the peace is about a
+ hundred pounds a year, with lodging, but although his duties often take
+ him far afield he is not provided with a vehicle, and must either cycle or
+ defray the cost of carriage hire. I know many of these rural magistrates,
+ and have ever found them men of education and intelligence. I, now, for
+ the first time, found one well read in English literature, not only able
+ to discuss Shakespeare and Walter Scott, but the latest English novel
+ appearing in translation as a feuilleton. It is well that these small
+ officials should have such resources. Tied down as they are to remote
+ country spots, their existence is often monotonous enough, especially
+ during the winter months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems to be a canon of French faith that you cannot have too much of a
+ good thing, anyhow in the matter of wedding festivities. Parisian society
+ is beginning to adopt English saving of time and money, fashionable
+ marriages there now being followed by a brief lunch and reception.
+ Country-folks stick to tradition, preferring to make the most of an event
+ which as a rule happens only once during a lifetime. Gratifying as was the
+ experience to an English guest, especially that guest being a devoted
+ admirer of France, I must honestly confess that my share in such a
+ celebration constituted probably the hardest day&rsquo;s work I ever performed.
+ Here I will explain that the bride&rsquo;s father was head forester of my host
+ and hostess, the great folks of the place, and adored by their humbler
+ neighbours. Château and cottage were thus closely, nay affectionately,
+ interested in the important event I am about to describe, and this aspect
+ of it is fully as noteworthy as the truly Gallic character of the long
+ drawn out fête itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By nine a.m. horses and carriages of the château, adorned with wedding
+ favours, were flying madly about in all directions conveying the wedding
+ party to and from the Mairie for the civil ceremony. An hour later we were
+ ourselves off to the village church, the house party including three
+ English guests. The enormously long religious ceremony over, a procession
+ was formed headed by musicians, bride and bridegroom leading the way,
+ fifty and odd couples following and the round of the village was made. At
+ the door of the festive house we formed a circle, the newly-wedded pair
+ embracing everyone and receiving congratulations; this is a somewhat
+ lachrymose ceremony. The marriage was in every way satisfactory, but the
+ nice-looking young bride, a general favourite, was quitting for ever her
+ childhood&rsquo;s home. After some little delay we all took our places in two
+ banqueting rooms, the tables being arranged horse-shoe wise. Facing bride
+ and bridegroom sat my host, the second room being presided over by the
+ bride&rsquo;s father, of whom I shall have something to say later. Here I give
+ the bill of fare, merely adding that the festive board was neatly, even
+ elegantly, spread, and that every dish was excellent:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Hors d&rsquo;oeuvre Salade de saison
+ Radis, beurre frais, Langue fumée Fruits
+ Bouchées à la Reine Brioche. Nougat
+ Daim, sauce chassuer Desserts varies
+ Galantine truffée Vins
+ Salmis de canards Pineau, Bordeaux, Champagne
+ Choux-fleurs Café, Liqueurs.
+ Dinde truffée.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Looking down the lines of well-dressed people, all with the exception of
+ ourselves belonging to the same rank as the bride, I could but be struck
+ with the good looks, gentle bearing, and general appearance of everyone.
+ As to the head forester, he was one of Nature&rsquo;s gentlemen, and might
+ easily have passed for a general or senator. At the table sat several
+ young girls of the village, each having a cavalier, all these dressed very
+ neatly and comporting themselves like well-bred young ladies without
+ presumption or awkwardness. During the inevitable pauses between dish and
+ dish, one after another of these pretty girls stood up and gratified the
+ company with a song, the performance costing perhaps an effort, but being
+ got through simply and naturally. In the midst of the banquet, which
+ lasted over three hours, two professionals came to sing and recite. From
+ the breakfast table, after toasts,&mdash;the afternoon being now well
+ advanced&mdash;we again formed a procession to the Mairie, in front of
+ which <i>al fresco</i> dancing commenced. Add that this out-of-door ball
+ lasted till a second dinner, the dinner being followed by a second ball
+ lasting far into the small hours. Nor did the celebration end here. The
+ following day was equally devoted to visits, feasts, toasts, and dancing.
+ What a national heritage is this capacity for fellowship, gaiety, and
+ harmless mirth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bar-sur-Aube lies twelve miles off and a beautiful drive it is thither
+ from Soulaines. We gradually leave forest, pasture and arable land,
+ finding ourselves amid vineyards. At the little village of
+ Ville-sur-Terre, we one day halted at a farm-house for a chat, the
+ housewife most kindly presenting me with two highly decorative plates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we approach Bar-sur-Aube we come upon a wide and beautiful prospect,
+ wooded hills dominating the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This little town is very prettily situated, and like every other in France
+ possesses some old churches. Perhaps its most famous child is Bombonnel,
+ the great panther-slayer, born close by, who died at Dijon and whose
+ souvenirs bequeathed to me as a legacy I have given elsewhere. The son of
+ a working glazier, he made a little fortune as hawker of stockings in the
+ streets of New Orleans, returned to France, cleared the Algerian Tell of
+ panthers, for a time enjoyed ease with dignity in Burgundy; on the
+ outbreak of the Franco-German War in 1870, as leader of a thousand <i>francs-tireurs</i>,
+ gave the Germans more trouble than any commander of an army corps, twice
+ had a price of £1,000 set upon his head, was glorified by Victor Hugo,
+ received the decoration of the Legion of Honour, and as a reward for his
+ patriotic services several hundred acres of land in Algeria. A gigantic
+ statue of Sant Hubert, the patron of hunters, now commemorates the great
+ little man, for he was short of statue, in the cemetery of Dijon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bar-sur-Aube is connected with another notoriety, the infamous Madame de
+ la Motte, the arch-adventuress, who, a descendant herself of Valois kings,
+ proved the undoing of Marie Antoinette. As was truly said by a great
+ contemporary:&mdash;&ldquo;The affair of the Diamond Necklace,&rdquo; wrote Mirabeau,
+ &ldquo;has been the forerunner of the Revolution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Jeanne de Valois, rescued from the gutter by a benovolent lady of
+ title and a charitable priest, presents a psychological study rare even in
+ the annals of crime. Never, perhaps, were daring, unscrupulousness, and
+ the faculty of combination linked with so complete a disregard to
+ consequences. The moving spring of her actions, often so complicated and
+ foolhardy, was love of money and display. It seemed as if in her person,
+ was accumulated the lavishness of French Royal mistresses from Diane de
+ Poitiers down to Madame Dubarry. There was a good deal of the Becky Sharp
+ about her too, although there is nothing in her history to show that, like
+ Thackeray&rsquo;s heroine, &ldquo;she had no objection to pay people if she had the
+ money.&rdquo; If, indeed, anything in the shape of ethics guided the most
+ astoundingly ingenious swindler we know of, it was some such principle as
+ this: she ought to have been at Versailles, there being received as a
+ recognised Princess of the Royal House; since, through no fault whatever
+ of her own, she was not, she had a perfect right to avenge herself upon
+ royalty and society in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How she wormed herself into the confidence of the Cardinal de Rohan, a man
+ of the world and of education, would seem wholly unaccountable but for one
+ fact. The Prince Primate had faith in Cagliostro and his nostrums, and
+ when an individual has recourse to astrologers and fortune-tellers, we are
+ quite in a position to gauge his mental condition. Like Mdlle. Couesdon of
+ contemporary fame, Cagliostro held intercourse with the angel Gabriel, but
+ his occult powers and privileges far exceeded those of the Parisian
+ lady-seer. He was actually in the habit of dining with Henri IV., and two
+ days before the Cardinal&rsquo;s arrest made his client believe that he had just
+ accepted such an invitation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been Rohan&rsquo;s ambition to obtain the favour of the Queen and a
+ foremost position at court, hence the readiness with which he fell into
+ the trap. For &ldquo;the Valois orphan,&rdquo; now Comtesse de la Motte, not only
+ possessed great personal attractions, but an extraordinary gift of
+ persuasiveness. Without much apparent trouble she made the Cardinal
+ believe that she was in the Queen&rsquo;s favour, and indeed in her confidence.
+ Having got so far the rest was easy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the acquisition of the already celebrated Diamond Necklace was first
+ thought of, how, by the aid of willing tools, she matured and carried out
+ her deep-laid and diabolical scheme, reads like an adventure from the
+ &ldquo;Arabian Nights.&rdquo; The personification of the Queen by a little dressmaker
+ who happened to resemble her, the forgery of the Royal signature, the
+ final attainment of the diamonds, all seemed so easy to this consummate
+ trickster that it is small wonder she became intoxicated with success and
+ blind to consequences. No sooner was the necklace in her possession than,
+ of course, as fast as possible it was turned, not into money, but into
+ money&rsquo;s worth. Houses and lands, equipages and furniture, costly apparel,
+ and delicacies for the table were purchased, not with louis d&rsquo;or, but with
+ diamonds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We read of her triumphant entry into the little town of Bar-sur-Aube,
+ cradle of the Saint Rémy-Valois family, in a berline with white trappings
+ and the Valois armorials, before and behind the carriage, which was drawn
+ by &ldquo;four English horses with short tails,&rdquo; rode lacqueys, whilst on the
+ footboard ready to open the door stood a negro, &ldquo;covered, from head to
+ foot with silver.&rdquo; Still more dazzling was the dress of Madame la
+ Comtesse, richest brocade trimmed with rubies and emeralds. As to the
+ Count, not content with having rings on every finger he wore four gold
+ watch chains! Besides holding open house when at home, the pair had a
+ table always spread with dainties for those who chose to partake in their
+ hosts&rsquo; absence. Among the toys paid for in diamonds was an automatic bird
+ that warbled and flapped its wings. This was intended for the amusement of
+ visitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carnival proved of short duration. It was on the 1st of February,
+ 1783, that the diamond necklace was handed over to Madame de la Motte,
+ Rohan receiving in return the forged signature of &ldquo;Marie-Antoinette de
+ France.&rdquo; On August of the same year, in the midst of a banquet given at
+ Bar-sur-Aube, a visitor arrived with startling news. &ldquo;The Prince Cardinal
+ de Rohan, Grand Almoner of France, was on the Festival of Assumption,
+ arrested in pontifical robes, charged with having purchased a diamond
+ necklace in the name of the Queen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charm of these little French towns and rustic spots lies in their
+ remoteness, the feeling they give us of being so entirely aloof from
+ familiar surroundings. In many a small Breton or Norman town we hear
+ little else but English speech, and in the one general shop of tiny
+ villages see <i>The New York Herald</i> on sale. But from the time of
+ leaving Nemours to that of reaching the farthest point mentioned in these
+ sketches we encounter no English or American tourists. This essentially
+ foreign atmosphere is not less agreeable than conducive to instruction. We
+ are thus thrown into direct contact with the country people and are
+ enabled to realise French modes of life and thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Within the last twenty-five years so many new lines of railway have been
+ opened in France that there is no longer any inducement&mdash;I am
+ inclined to say excuse&mdash;for keeping to the main road. Yet, strangely
+ enough, English tourists mostly ignore such opportunities. For one
+ fellow-countryman we meet on the route described here, hundreds are
+ encountered on the time-honoured roads running straight from Paris to
+ Switzerland. Quit Dijon by any other way and the English-speaking world is
+ lost sight of, perhaps more completely than anywhere else on the civilised
+ globe. Again and again it has happened to myself to be regarded in rural
+ France as a kind of curiosity, the first subject of Queen Victoria ever
+ met with; again and again I have spent days, nay weeks, on French soil,
+ the sole reminder of my native land being the daily paper posted in
+ London. It is now many years since I first visited St. Jean de Losne, in
+ company of a French acquaintance, a notary, both of us being bound to a
+ country-house on the Saône. At that time the railway did not connect it
+ with Dijon, and in brilliant September weather we jogged along by
+ diligence, a pleasant five hours&rsquo; journey enough. My companion, a native
+ of the Côte d&rsquo;Or, seemed to know everyone we passed on the way, whenever
+ we stopped to change horses getting out for a gossip with this friend and
+ that he had taken the precaution to provide himself with a huge loaf of
+ bread, from which he hacked off morsels for us both from time to time. As
+ we had started at seven o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and got no déjeûner till
+ past noon, the doles were acceptable. The fellow-traveller of that first
+ journey&mdash;alas! With how many friends of the wine country!&mdash;has
+ long since gone to his rest. The second time I set forth alone, taking my
+ seat in the slow&mdash;the very slow&mdash;train running alongside the
+ Canal de Bourgogne. On the central platforms of the Dijon railway station,
+ crowds of English and American tourists were hurrying to their trains,
+ bound respectively for Paris and Geneva. No sooner was I fairly off, my
+ fellow travellers being two or three country-folks, than the
+ conventionalities of travel had vanished. Surroundings as well as scenery
+ became entirely French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Burgundian character is very affable, and although people may wonder
+ what can be your errand in remote regions, they never show their curiosity
+ after disagreeable fashion. They are delighted to discover that interest
+ in France&mdash;artistic, economic, or industrial&mdash;has led you
+ thither, and will afford any assistance or information in their power.
+ They seem to regard the wayfaring Britisher as whimsical, that is all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A train that crawls has this advantage, we can see everything by the way,
+ villages, crops, and methods of cultivation. The landscape soon changes.
+ The familiar characteristics of the wine country disappear. Instead of
+ vine-clad hills, nurseries of young plants grafted on American stocks, and
+ vineyard after vineyard in rich maturity, we now see hop gardens, colza
+ fields, and wide pastures. Here and there we obtain a glimpse of some
+ walled-in farmhouse, recalling the granges of our own Isle of Wight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alongside the railway runs the canal, that important waterway connecting
+ the Seine with the Saône; but the Saône itself, Mr. Hamerton&rsquo;s favourite
+ river, is not seen till we reach our destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little town of St. Jean de Losne, although unknown to English readers,
+ is one of the most historic of France. No other, indeed, boasts of more
+ honourable renown. As Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc had done just two centuries before, St.
+ Jean de Losne saved the country in 1636. When the Imperial forces under
+ Galas attempted the occupation of Burgundy, the dauntless townsfolk long
+ held the enemy at bay and compelled final retreat. After generations
+ profited by this heroism. Until the great year of 1789, the town, by royal
+ edict, enjoyed complete immunity from taxation. On the outbreak of the
+ Revolution, with true patriotic spirit, the citizens surrendered those
+ privileges, of their own free will sharing the public burdens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first sight that meets the eye on entering St. Jean de Losne is the
+ monument erected in commemoration of the siege. &ldquo;Better late than never,&rdquo;
+ is a proverb applicable to public as well as private affairs of
+ conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little farther, and we reach the church of St. Jean. It contains a
+ magnificent pulpit, carved from a single block of rich red marble, the
+ niches ornamented with charming statuettes of the apostles. Close by is
+ the Hôtel de Ville, in which are some interesting historic relics. As I
+ passed through the courtyard, I saw an odd sight. One might have fancied
+ that a second Imperial army threatened a siege, and that the townsfolk
+ were laying in stores. The pavement was piled with bread and meat, whilst
+ butchers and bakers were busily engaged in dividing these into portions,
+ authorities, municipal, military and police, looking on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I learned that these rations were for the regiments quartered in the town
+ during the autumn manoeuvres. Every day such distributions take place; in
+ country places the troops have recourse to the peasants, very often being
+ treated as guests. A young friend, serving his three years, told me that
+ nowhere had he found country folk more hospitable than in the Côte d&rsquo;Or.
+ No sooner did the soldiers make their appearance in a village, than forth
+ came the inhabitants to welcome them, officers being carried off to
+ châteaux, men by twos and threes to the home of curé or small owner. &ldquo;Not
+ a peasant,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but would bring up a bottle of good wine from his
+ cellar, and often after dinner we would get up a dance out of doors. On
+ the saddle sometimes from two in the morning till twelve at noon, the kind
+ reception and the jollity of the evening made up for the hardship and
+ fatigue. We have just had several days of bad weather, and had to sleep on
+ straw in barns and outhouses, wherever indeed shelter was to be had. Not
+ one of us ever lost heart or temper; we remained gay as larks all the
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour&rsquo;s railway journey from St. Jean de Losne takes the traveller to
+ Lons-le-Saulnier, beautifully situated at the foot of the Jura range on
+ the threshold of wild and romantic scenery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A decade had not robbed this little town of its old-world look familiar to
+ me, but meantime a new Lons-le-Saulnier had sprung up. Since my first
+ visit a handsome bathing establishment has been built, with casino,
+ concert-room, and all the other essentials of an inland watering-place.
+ The waters are especially recommended for skin affections, gout, and
+ rheumatism. Formerly the mineral springs of Lons, as the townsfolk lazily
+ call the place, were chiefly frequented by residents and near neighbours.
+ Improved accommodation, increased accessibility, cheapened travel and
+ additional attractions, have changed matters. The season opening in May,
+ and lasting till the end of October, is now patronised by hundreds of
+ visitors from all parts of eastern France. These health resorts are much
+ more sociable than our own. Folks drop alike social, political, and
+ religious differences for the time being, and cultivate the art of being
+ agreeable as only French people can. Excursions, picnics, and pleasure
+ parties are arranged; in the evening the young folks dance whilst their
+ elders play a rubber of whist, chat, look on, or make marriages. Many a
+ wedding is arranged during the <i>Saison des Bains</i>, nor can such
+ unions be called <i>mariages de convenance</i>, as in holiday-time
+ intercourse is comparatively unrestricted. Grown-up or growing-up sons and
+ daughters then meet as those on English or American soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lons-le-Saulnier possesses little of interest except its Museum, rich in
+ modern sculpture, and its quaint arcades, recalling the period of Spanish
+ rule in Franche Comté. The excursions lying within easy reach are numerous
+ and delightful. Foremost of these is a visit to the marvellous rock-shut
+ valley of Baume-les-Messieurs, so called to distinguish it from
+ Baume-les-Dames near Besançon. The descent is made on foot, and at first
+ sight appears not only perilous but impracticable, the zigzag path being
+ cut in almost perpendicular shelves of rock. This mountain staircase, or
+ the &ldquo;Échelle des Baumes,&rdquo; is not to be recommended to those afflicted with
+ giddiness. Little sunshine reaches the heart of the gorge, yet below the
+ turf is brilliant, a veritable islet of green threaded by a tiny river.
+ The natural walls shutting us in have a majestic aspect, but playful and
+ musical is the Seille as it ripples at our feet. Travellers of an
+ adventuresome turn can explore the stalactite caverns and other marvels
+ around; not the least of these is a tiny lake, the depth of which has
+ never been sounded. For half-a-mile the valley winds towards the
+ straggling village of Baume, and there the marvels abruptly end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing finer in the way of scenery is to be found throughout eastern
+ France. In the ancient Abbey Church are two masterpieces, a retable in
+ carved wood and a tomb ornamented with exquisite statuettes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; NANCY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a pleasant six hours&rsquo; journey from Dijon via Chalindrey to Nancy. We
+ pass the little village of Gemeaux, in which amongst French friends I have
+ spent so many happy days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the railway we catch sight of the monticule crowned by an obelisk;
+ surmounting the vine-clad slopes, we also obtain a glimpse of its &ldquo;Ormes
+ de Sully,&rdquo; or group of magnificent elms, one of many in France supposed to
+ have been planted by the great Sully. Since my first acquaintance with
+ this neighbourhood, more than twenty years ago, the aspect of the country
+ hereabouts has in no small degree changed. Hop gardens in many spots have
+ replaced vineyards, owing to the devastation of the phylloxera. It was in
+ the last years of the third Empire that the inhabitants of Roquemaure on
+ the Rhône found their vines mysteriously withering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later the left bank was attacked, and about the same time the
+ famous brandy producing region of Cognac in the Charente showed similar
+ symptoms. The cause of the mischief, the terrible Phylloxera devastatrix,
+ was brought to light in 1868. This tiny insect is hardly visible to the
+ naked eye, yet so formed by Nature as to be a wholesale engine of
+ destruction, its phenomenal productiveness being no less fatal than its
+ equally phenomenal powers of locomotion. One of these tiny parasites alone
+ propagates at the rate of millions of eggs in a season, a thousand alone
+ sufficing to destroy two acres and a half of vineyard. As formidable as
+ this terrible fertility is the speed of the insect&rsquo;s wings or rather sails
+ according extraordinary ease of movement. A gust of wind, a mere breath of
+ air, and like a grain of dust or a tuft of thistledown, this germ of
+ destruction is borne whither chance directs, to the certain ruin of any
+ vineyard on which it lights. The havoc spread with terrible rapidity. From
+ every vine-growing region of France arose cries of consternation. Within
+ the space of a few years hundreds of thousands of acres were hopelessly
+ blighted. In 1878 the invader was first noticed at Meursault in Burgundy;
+ a few days later it appeared in the Botanical Gardens of Dijon. The cost
+ of replanting vineyards with American stocks is so heavy, viz.: twenty
+ pounds per hectare, that even many rich vintagers have preferred to
+ cultivate other crops. Some owners have sold their lands outright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On quitting Is-sur-Tille we enter the so-called Plat de Langres, or richly
+ cultivated plains stretching between that town and Toul, in the Department
+ of the Meurthe and Moselle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the almost sudden change of landscape&mdash;woods, winding rivers,
+ and hayfields in which peasants are getting in their autumn crop,
+ literally mauve-tinted from the profusion of autumn crocuses&mdash;we
+ encounter sharp contrasts, the events of 1870-1 changing the French
+ frontier, necessitating the transformation we now behold&mdash;once quiet,
+ old-world towns now wearing the aspect of a vast camp, everywhere to be
+ seen military defences on a wholly inconceivable scale. It is comforting
+ to hear from the lips of those who should know, that at the present time
+ war is impossible, the engines of warfare being so tremendous that the
+ result of a conflict would be simply annihilation on both sides. After ten
+ years&rsquo; absence, and in spite of radical changes, the elegant, exquisitely
+ kept town of Nancy appears little altered to me. The ancient capital of
+ Lorraine is now one of the largest garrisons on the eastern frontier, but
+ the military aspect is not too obtrusive. Except for the perpetual roll of
+ the heavy artillery waggons and perpetual sight of the red pantalon, we
+ are apt to forget the present position of Nancy from a strategic point of
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other changes are pleasanter to dwell on. The Facultés, or schools of
+ medicine, science, and law, removed hither from Strasburg after the
+ annexation, have immensely increased the intellectual status of Nancy,
+ whilst from the commercial and industrial side the advance has been no
+ less. Its population has doubled since the events of 1870-1, and is
+ constantly increasing. Why so few English travellers visit this dainty and
+ attractive little capital is not easy to explain. More interesting even
+ than the artistic and historic collections of Nancy is the celebrated
+ School of Forestry. Formerly a few young Englishmen were out-students of
+ this school, but since the study had been made accessible at home the
+ foreign element at the time of my visit, consisted of a few Roumanians,
+ sent by their Government. The École Forestière, courteously shown to
+ visitors, was founded sixty years ago and is conducted on almost a
+ military system. Only twenty-four students are received annually, and
+ these must have passed severe examinations either at the École Agronomique
+ of Paris, or at the École Polytechnique. The staff consists of a director
+ and six professors, all paid by the State. Two or three years form the
+ curriculum and successful students are sure of obtaining good Government
+ appointments. Forestry being a most important service, every branch of
+ natural science connected with the preservation of forests, and
+ afforesting is taught, the school collections forming a most interesting
+ and wholly unique museum. Here we see, exquisitely arranged as books on
+ library shelves, specimens of wood of all countries, whilst elsewhere
+ sections from the tiniest to the gigantic stems of America. Very
+ instructive, too, are the models of those regions in France already
+ afforested, and of those undergoing the process; we also see the system by
+ means of which the soil is so consolidated as to render plantation
+ possible, namely, the arresting of mountain torrents by dams and barrages.
+ In the Dauphiné, and French Alps generally, many denuded tracks are in
+ course of transformation, the expense being partly borne by the State and
+ partly by the communes. It is impossible to over-estimate the importance
+ of such works, alike from a climatic, economic, and hygienic point of
+ view. The extensive eucalyptus plantations in Algeria, teach us the value
+ of afforesting, vast tracks having been thereby rendered healthful and
+ cultivable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strikingly beautiful city, sad of aspect withal, is this ancient capital
+ of Lorraine, ever wearing half mourning, as it seems, for the loss of its
+ sister Alsace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unforgettable is the glimpse of the Place Stanislas, with its bronze
+ gates, fountains, and statue, worthy of a great capital; of the beautiful
+ figure of Duke Antonio of Lorraine on horseback, under an archway of
+ flamboyant Gothic; of the Ducal Palace and its airy colonnade; lastly, of
+ the picturesque old city gate, the Porte de la Crafie, one of the most
+ striking monuments of the kind in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things may be glanced at in an hour, but in order to enjoy Nancy
+ thoroughly, a day or two should be devoted to it, and creature comforts
+ are to be had in the hotels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Ducal Palace are shown the rich tapestries found in the tent of
+ Charles le Téméraire after his defeat before Nancy, and other relics of
+ that Haroun-al-Raschid of his epoch, who bivouacked off gold and silver
+ plate, and wore on the battle-field diamonds worth half a million. The
+ cenotaphs of the Dukes of Lorraine are in a little church outside the town&mdash;the
+ <i>chapelle ronde</i>, as the splendid little mausoleum is designated, its
+ imposing monuments of black marble and richly-decorated octagonal dome,
+ making up a solemn and beautiful whole. Graceful and beautiful also are
+ the monuments in the church itself, and those of another church, des
+ Cordeliers, close to the Ducal Palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy is especially rich in monumental sculpture, but it is in the
+ cathedral that we are enchanted by the marble statues of the four doctors
+ of the church&mdash;St. Augustine, St. Grégoire, St. Léon, and St. Jerome.
+ These are the work of Nicholas Drouin, a native of the town, and formerly
+ ornamented a tomb in the church of the Cordeliers just mentioned. The
+ physiognomy, expression, and pose of St. Augustine are well worthy of a
+ sculptor&rsquo;s closest study, but it is rather as a whole than in detail that
+ this exquisite statue delights the ordinary observer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All four sculptures are noble works of art; the beautiful, dignified
+ figure of St. Augustine somehow takes strongest hold of the imagination.
+ We would fain return to it again and again, as indeed we would fain return
+ to all else we have seen in the fascinating city of Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Nancy, by way of Epinal, we may easily reach the heart of the Vosges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. &mdash; IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At the railway station of Nancy, I was met by a French family party, my
+ hosts to be in a château on the other side of the French frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had jogged on pleasantly enough for about half an hour, when the
+ gentlemen of the party, with (to me) perplexing smiles, briskly folded
+ their newspapers and consigned them, not to their pockets or rugs, but to
+ their ladies, by whom the journals were secreted in underskirts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are approaching the frontier,&rdquo; said Madame to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I afterwards learned that only one or two French newspapers are allowed to
+ circulate in the annexed provinces, the <i>Temps</i> and others, the names
+ of which I forget; for the first and second offence of smuggling
+ prohibited newspapers, the offender is subjected to a reprimand, the third
+ offence is punished by a fine, the fourth involves imprisonment. Now, as
+ all of us know who have lived in France, the <i>Figaro</i> is a veritable
+ necessity to the better-off classes in France, the <i>Times</i> to John
+ Bull not more so. Similarly, to the peasant and the artisan, the <i>Petit
+ Journal</i> takes the place of the half-penny newspaper in England. This
+ deprivation is cruelly felt, and is part of the system introduced by
+ William II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Custom-house dues are at all times vexatious, but on the French-Prussian
+ frontier they are so arranged as to provoke patriotic feeling. It may seem
+ a foolish fancy for French folks, German subjects of the Kaiser, to prefer
+ French soap and stationery, yet what more natural than the purchase of
+ such things when within easy reach? Thus, on alighting at the frontier,
+ not only were trunks and baskets turned out, we were all eyed from head to
+ foot suspiciously. My hosts&rsquo; newspapers were not unearthed, certainly;
+ perhaps their rank and position counted for something. But one country
+ girl had to pay duty on a shilling box of writing paper, another was
+ mulcted to half the value of a bottle of scent, and so on. There was
+ something really pathetic in the forced display of these trifles, the
+ purchasers being working people and peasants. All French goods and
+ productions are exorbitantly taxed. Thus a lady must pay three or four
+ shillings duty on a bonnet perhaps costing twenty in France. On a cask of
+ wine, the duty often exceeds the price of its contents, and, according to
+ an inexorable law of human nature, the more inaccessible are these
+ patriotic luxuries, so the more persistently will they be coveted and
+ indulged in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Custom House officials on the Prussian side have no easy time of it,
+ ladies especially giving them no little trouble. The duty on a new dress
+ sent or brought from France across the frontier is ten francs; and we were
+ told an amusing story of a French lady, who thought to neatly circumvent
+ the douane. She was going from Nancy to Strasburg to a wedding, and in the
+ ladies&rsquo; waiting-room on the French side changed her dress, putting on the
+ new, a rich costume bought for the ceremony. The officials got wind of the
+ matter. The dress was seized and finally redeemed after damages of a
+ thousand francs!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Persons in indifferent circumstances, however patriotic they may be, can
+ subsist upon German beer, soap, and writing paper. The blood tax, upon
+ which I shall say something further on, is a wholly different matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short drive brought us to a noble château, inside a beautifully wooded
+ park, the iron gateway showing armorial bearings. Indoors there was
+ nothing to remind me that I had exchanged Republican France for autocratic
+ Prussia. Guests, servants, speech, usages, books, were French, or, in the
+ case of the three latter, English. Every member of the family spoke
+ English, afternoon tea was served as at home, and the latest Tauchnitz
+ volumes lay on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Difficult indeed it seemed to realise that I had crossed the frontier,
+ that though within easy reach, almost in sight of it, the miss, alas! Was
+ as good as a mile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alsace-Lorraine, I may here mention, is a verbal annexation dating from
+ 1871. Whilst Alsace was German until its conquest by Louis XIV., Lorraine,
+ the country of Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc, had been in part French and French-speaking
+ for centuries. Alsace under French <i>régime</i> retained alike
+ Protestantism and Teutonic speech. We can easily understand that the
+ changes of 1871 should come much harder to the Catholic Lorrainers than to
+ their Protestant Alsatian neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bitterness of feeling does not seem to me to diminish with time. On the
+ occasion of my third visit to Germanised France, I found things much the
+ same, the clinging to France ineradicable as ever, nothing like the
+ faintest sign of reconciliation with Imperial rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might suppose that, after a generation, some slight approach to
+ intercourse would exist among the French and Prussian populations. By the
+ upper classes the Germans, no matter what their rank or position, remain
+ tabooed as were Jews in the Ghetto of former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At luncheon next day, my host smilingly informed me that he had filled up
+ the paper left by the commissary of police, concerning their newly arrived
+ English visitor. We are here, it must be remembered, in a perpetual state
+ of siege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I put down Canterbury as your birthplace&mdash;&rdquo; he began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Heavens!&rdquo; exclaimed I, &ldquo;I was born near Ipswich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he said, smiling, &ldquo;I just put down the first name that occurred to
+ me, and filled in particulars as to age, etc.,&rdquo; here he bowed, &ldquo;after a
+ fashion which I felt would be satisfactory to yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This kind of domiciliary visit may appear a joking matter, but to live
+ under a state of siege is no subject for pleasantry, as I shall show
+ further on. Here is another instance of the comic side of annexation, if
+ the adjective could be applied to such a subject. In the salon I noticed a
+ sofa cushion, covered, as I thought to my astonishment, with the Prussian
+ flag. But my hostess smilingly informed me that, as the Tricolour was
+ forbidden in Germanised Lorraine, by way of having the next best thing to
+ it, she had used the Russian colours, symbol of the new ally of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another vexation of unfortunate <i>annexés</i> is in the matter of
+ bookbinding. French people naturally like to have their books bound in
+ French style, but it is next to impossible to get this done in Alsace. If
+ the books are bound in France, there is the extra cost of carriage and
+ duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very pleasant time I had under this French roof on German soil. Our days
+ were spent in walks and drives, our evenings entertained with music and
+ declamation. Now we had the Kreutzer Sonata exquisitely performed by
+ amateur musicians, now we listened to selections from Lamartine, Nadaud,
+ Victor Hugo and others, as admirably rendered by a member of this
+ accomplished family, all the members of which were now gathered together.
+ I saw something alike of their poorer and richer neighbours, all of course
+ being their country-people. This social circle, including the household
+ staff, was rigorously French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me now describe a Lorraine lunch, as the French <i>goûter</i> or
+ afternoon collation is universally called, our hosts being a family of
+ peasant farmers, their guests the house party from the château. We had
+ only to drive a mile or two before quitting annexed France for France
+ proper, the respective frontiers indicated by tall posts bearing the name
+ and eagle of the German Empire and the R.F. of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are now on French soil,&rdquo; said my host to me with a smile of
+ satisfaction, and the very horses seemed to realise the welcome fact.
+ Right merrily they trotted along, joyfully sniffing the air of home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lorraine villages are very unlike their spick and span neighbours of
+ Alsace, visited by me two years before. Why Catholic villages should be
+ dirty and Protestant ones clean, I will not attempt to explain. Such,
+ however, is the case. As we drove through the line of dung-heaps and
+ liquid manure rising above what looked like barns, I was ill-prepared for
+ the comfort and tidiness prevailing within. What a change when the door
+ opened, and our neatly dressed entertainers ushered us into their
+ dining-room! Here, looking on to a well-kept garden was a table spread
+ with spotless linen, covers being laid as in a middle-class house. An
+ armchair, invariable token of respect, was placed for the English visitor;
+ then we sat down to table, two blue-bloused men, uncle and nephew, and
+ three elderly women in mob caps and grey print gowns, dispensing
+ hospitality to their guests, belonging to the <i>noblesse</i> of Lorraine.
+ There was no show of subservience on the one part, or of condescension on
+ the other. Conversation flowed easily and gaily as at the château itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I here add that whilst the French <i>noblesse</i> and <i>bourgeoisie</i>
+ remain apart as before the Revolution, with the peasant folk it is not so.
+ These good people were not tenants or in any way dependents on my hosts.
+ They were simply humble friends, the great tie being that of nationality.
+ The order of the feast was peculiar. Being Friday no delicacy in the shape
+ of a raised game pie could be offered; we were, therefore, first of all
+ served with bread and butter and <i>vin ordinaire</i>. Then a dish of
+ fresh honey in the comb was brought out; next, a huge open plum tart. When
+ the tart had disappeared, cakes of various kinds and a bottle of good
+ Bordeaux were served; finally, grapes, peaches, and pears with choice
+ liqueurs. Healths were drunk, glasses chinked, and when at last the long
+ lunch came to an end, we visited dairy, bedrooms, and garden, all patterns
+ of neatness. This family of small peasant owners is typical of the very
+ best rural population in France. The united capital of the group&mdash;uncle,
+ aunts and nephew&mdash;would not perhaps exceed a few thousand pounds, but
+ the land descending from generation to generation had increased in value
+ owing to improved cultivation. Hops form the most important crop
+ hereabouts. This village of French Lorraine testified to the educational
+ liberality of the Republic. For the three hundred and odd souls the
+ Government here provides schoolmaster, schoolmistress, and a second female
+ teacher for the infant school, their salaries being double those paid
+ under the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now a word concerning the blood-tax. Rich and well-to-do French residents
+ in the annexed provinces can afford to send their sons across the frontier
+ and pay the heavy fines imposed for default. With the artisan and peasant
+ the case is otherwise. Here defection from military service means not only
+ lifelong separation but worldly ruin. To the wealthy an occasional sight
+ of their young soldiers in France is an easy matter. A poor man must stay
+ at home. If his sons quit Alsace-Lorraine in order to go through their
+ military service on French soil, they cannot return until they have
+ attained their forty-fifth year, and the penalty of default is so high
+ that it means, and is intended to mean, ruin. There is also another crying
+ evil of the system. French conscripts forced into the German Army are
+ always sent as far as possible from home. If they fall ill and die, kith
+ or kin can seldom reach them. Again, as French is persistently spoken in
+ the home, and German only learnt under protest at the primary school, the
+ young <i>annexé</i> enters upon his enforced military service with an
+ imperfect knowledge of the latter language, the hardships of his position
+ being thereby immensely enhanced. No one here hinted to me of any especial
+ severity being shown to French conscripts on this account, but we can
+ easily understand the disadvantage under which they labour. I visited a
+ tenant farmer on the other side of the frontier, whose only son had lately
+ died in hospital at Berlin. The poor father was telegraphed for but
+ arrived too late, the blow saddening for ever an honest and laborious
+ life. This farmer was well-to-do, but had other children. How then could
+ he pay the fine imposed upon the defaulter? And, of course, French service
+ involved lifelong separation. Cruel, indeed, is the dilemma of the
+ unfortunate <i>annexé</i>. But the blood-tax is felt in other ways. During
+ my third stay in Germanised Lorraine the autumn manoeuvres were taking
+ place. This means that alike rich and poor are compelled to lodge and cook
+ for as many soldiers as the authorities choose to impose upon them. I was
+ assured by a resident that poor people often bid the worn-out men to their
+ humble board, the conscripts&rsquo; fare being regulated according to the
+ strictest economy. In rich houses, German officers receive similar
+ hospitality, but we can easily understand under what conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The annexed provinces are of course being Germanised by force. Immigration
+ continues at a heavy cost. Here is an instance in point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Alsace was handed over to the German Government it boasted of
+ absolute solvency. It is now burdened with debt, owing, among many other
+ reasons, to the high salaries received by the more important German
+ officials; the explanation of this being that the position of these
+ functionaries is so unpleasant they have to be bribed into such
+ expatriation. Thus their salaries are double what they were under French
+ rule. Not that friction often occurs between the German civil authorities
+ and French subjects; everyone bears witness to the politeness of the
+ former, but it is impossible for them not to feel the distastefulness of
+ their own presence. On the other hand, the perpetual state of siege is a
+ grievance daily felt. Free speech, liberty of the press, rights of public
+ meeting, are unknown. Not long since, a peasant just crossed the frontier,
+ and as he touched French soil, shouted &ldquo;Vive la France!&rdquo; On his return he
+ was convicted of <i>lèse majesté</i> and sent to prison. Another story
+ points to the same moral. At a meeting of a village council an aged
+ peasant farmer, who cried &ldquo;We are not subjects but servants of William
+ II.&rdquo; Was imprisoned for six weeks. The occasion that called forth the
+ protest was an enforced levy for some public works of no advantage
+ whatever to the inhabitants. Sad indeed is the retrospect, sadder still
+ the looking forward, with which we quit French friends in the portions of
+ territory now known as Alsace-Lorraine. And when we say &ldquo;Adieu&rdquo; the word
+ has additional meaning. Epistolary intercourse, no more than table-talk,
+ is sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; IN GERMANISED ALSACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Who would quit Alsace without a pilgrimage to Saverne and the country home
+ in which Edmond About wrote his most delightful pages and in which he
+ dispensed such princely hospitality? The author of &ldquo;Le Fellah &ldquo; was forced
+ to forsake his beloved retreat after the events of 1870-1; the experiences
+ of this awful time are given in his volume &ldquo;Alsace,&rdquo; and dedicated to his
+ son&mdash;<i>pour qu&rsquo;il se souvienne</i>&mdash;in order that he might
+ remember. Here also as under that Lorraine roof I felt myself in France.
+ At the time of my visit the property was for sale. French people, however,
+ are loth to purchase estates in the country they may be said to inhabit on
+ sufferance, while rich Germans prefer to build palatial villas within the
+ triple fortifications and thirteen newly constructed forts which are
+ supposed to render Strasburg impregnable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The railway takes us from Strasburg in an hour to the picturesque old town
+ of Saverne, beautifully placed above the Zorn. Turning our backs upon the
+ one long street winding upwards to the château, we follow a road leading
+ into the farthermost recesses of the valley, from which rise on either
+ side the wooded spurs of the lower Vosges. Here in a natural <i>cul-de-sac</i>,
+ wedged in between pine-clad slopes, is as delightful a retreat as genius
+ or a literary worker could desire. On the superb September day of my visit
+ the place looked its best, and warm was the welcome we received from the
+ occupiers, a cultivated and distinguished French Protestant family,
+ formerly living at Srasburg, but since the events of 1870-1 removed to
+ Nancy. They hired this beautiful place from year to year, merely spending
+ a few weeks here during the Long Vacation. The intellectual atmosphere
+ still recalled bygone days, when Edmond About used to gather round him
+ literary brethren, alike French and foreign. Pleasant it was to find here
+ English-speaking, England-loving, French people. Nothing can be simpler
+ than the house itself, in spite of its somewhat pretentious tower of which
+ About wrote so fondly. His study is a small, low-pitched room, not too
+ well lighted, but having a lovely outlook; beyond, the long, narrow
+ gardens, fruit, flower and vegetable, one leading out of another, rising
+ pine woods and the lofty peaks of the Vosges. So remote is this spot that
+ wild deer venture into the gardens, whilst squirrels make themselves at
+ home close to the house doors. Our host gave me much information about the
+ peasants. Although not nearly so prosperous as before the annexation, they
+ are doing fairly well. Some, indeed, are well off, possessing capital to
+ the amount of several thousand pounds, whilst a millionaire, that is, the
+ possessor of a million francs or forty thousand pounds, is found here and
+ there. The severance from France entailed, however, one enormous loss on
+ the farmer. This was the withdrawal of tobacco culture, a monopoly of the
+ French State which afforded maximum profits to the cultivator. With regard
+ to the indebtedness of the peasant-owner, my informant said that it
+ certainly existed, but not to any great extent, usury having been
+ prohibited by the local Reichstag a few years before. Again I found myself
+ among French surroundings, French traditions, French speech. Let me add,
+ however, that I heard none of the passionate regrets, recriminations, and
+ wishes that had constantly fallen on my ears ten years before. One prayer,
+ and one only, seems in every heart, on every lip, &ldquo;Peace, peace&mdash;only
+ let us have peace!&rdquo; It must be borne in mind that 20,000 French Alsatians
+ quitted Strasburg alone, and that those of the better classes who were
+ unable to emigrate sent their young sons across the frontier before the
+ age of seventeen. Thus, by a gradual process, the French element is being
+ eliminated from the towns, whilst in the country annexation came in a very
+ different guise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This will be seen from the account of another excursion made with French
+ friends living in Strasburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a beautiful drive to Blaesheim, southwest of the city, in a direct
+ line with the Vosges and Oberlin&rsquo;s country. We pass the enormous public
+ slaughterhouses and interminable lines of brand-new barracks, then under
+ one of the twelve stone gates with double portals that now protect the
+ city, leaving behind us the tremendous earthworks and powder magazines,
+ and are soon in the open plain. This vast plain is fertile and well
+ cultivated. On either side we see narrow, ribbon-like strips of maize,
+ potatoes, clover, hops, beetroot, and hemp. There are no apparent
+ boundaries of the various properties and no trees or houses to break the
+ uniformity. The farm-houses and premises, as in the Pyrenees, are grouped
+ together, forming the prettiest, neatest villages imaginable. Entzheim is
+ one of these. The broad, clean street, the large white-washed timber
+ houses, with projecting porches and roofs, may stand for a type of the
+ Alsatian &ldquo;Dorf.&rdquo; The houses are white-washed outside once a year, the
+ mahogany-coloured rafters, placed crosswise, forming effective
+ ornamentation. No manure heaps before the door are seen here, as in
+ Brittany, all is clean and sightly. We meet numbers of pedestrians, the
+ women mostly wearing the Alsatian head-dress, an enormous bow of broad
+ black ribbon with long ends, worn fan-like on the head, and lending an air
+ of great severity. The remainder of the costume&mdash;short blue or red
+ skirt (the colours distinguishing Protestant and Catholic), gay kerchief,
+ and apron&mdash;have all but vanished. As we approach our destination the
+ outlines of the Vosges become more distinct, and the plain is broken by
+ sloping vineyards and fir woods. We see no labourers afield, and, with one
+ exception, no cattle. It is strange how often cattle are cooped up in
+ pastoral regions. The farming here is on the old plan, and milch cows are
+ stabled from January to December, only being taken out to water.
+ Agricultural machinery and new methods are penetrating these villages at a
+ snail&rsquo;s pace. The division of property is excessive. There are no
+ lease-holds, and every farmer, alike on a small or large scale, is an
+ owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two classes in Alsace have been partly won over to the German rule; one is
+ that of the Protestant clergy, the other that of the peasants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Third Empire persistently snubbed its Protestant subjects, then, as at
+ the time of the Revocation, numbering many most distinguished citizens. No
+ attempts, moreover, were made to Gallicise the German-speaking population
+ of the Rhine provinces. Thus the wrench was much less felt here than in
+ Catholic, French-speaking Lorraine. Higher stipends, good dwelling-houses
+ and schools, have done much to soften annexation to the clergy. An
+ afternoon &ldquo;at home&rdquo; in a country parsonage a few miles from Strasburg,
+ reminded me of similar functions in an English rectory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the parsonage of Blaesheim we were warmly welcomed by friends, and in
+ their pretty garden found a group of ladies and gentlemen playing at
+ croquet, among them two nice-looking girls wearing the Alsatian <i>coiffe</i>
+ that enormous construction of black ribbon just mentioned. These young
+ ladies were daughters of the village mayor, a rich peasant, and had been
+ educated in Switzerland, speaking French correctly and fluently. Many
+ daughters of wealthy peasants marry civilians at Strasburg, when they for
+ once and for all cast off the last feature of traditional costume. After a
+ little chat, and being bidden to return to tea in half an hour, we visited
+ some other old acquaintances of my friends, a worthy peasant family
+ residing close by. Here also a surprise was in store for me. The head of
+ the house and his wife&mdash;both far advanced in the sixties and who
+ might have walked out of one of Erckman-Chatrian&rsquo;s novels&mdash;could not
+ speak a word of French, although throughout the best part of their lives
+ they had been French subjects!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admirable types they were, but by no means given to sentiment or romance.
+ The good man assured me in his quaint patois that he did not mind whether
+ he was French, German, or, for the matter of that, English, so long as he
+ could get along comfortably and peacefully! He added, however, that under
+ the former <i>régime</i> taxes had been much lower and farming much more
+ profitable. The good folk brought out bread and wine, and we toasted each
+ other in right hearty fashion. Over the sideboard of their clean,
+ well-furnished sitting room hung a small photograph of William II. On our
+ return to our first host we found a sumptuous five o&rsquo;clock tea prepared
+ for the ladies, whilst more solid refreshments awaited the gentlemen in
+ the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in a remote corner of Alsace, memorialized by Germany&rsquo;s greatest
+ poet, we find pathetic clinging to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everyone has read the story of Goethe and Frederika, how the great poet,
+ then a student at the Strasburg University, was taken by a comrade to the
+ simple parsonage of Sesenheim, how the artless daughter of the house with
+ her sweet Alsatian songs, enchanted the brilliant youth, how he found
+ himself, as he tells us in his autobiography, suddenly in the immortal
+ family of the Vicar of Wakefield. &ldquo;And here comes Moses too!&rdquo; cried
+ Goethe, as Frederika&rsquo;s brother appeared. That accidental visit has in turn
+ immortalised Sesenheim. The place breathes of Frederika. It has become a
+ shrine dedicated to pure, girlish love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new line of railway takes us from Strasburg in about an hour over the
+ flat, monotonous stretch of country, so slowly crossed by diligence in
+ Goethe&rsquo;s time. The appearance of the city from this side&mdash;the French
+ side&mdash;is truly awful: we see fortification after fortification, with
+ vast powder magazines at intervals, on the outer earthworks bristling rows
+ of cannon, beyond, several of the thirteen forts constructed since the
+ war. The bright greenery of the turf covering these earthworks does not
+ detract from their dreadful appearance. Past the vast workshops and stores
+ of the railway station&mdash;a small town in itself&mdash;past market
+ gardens, hop gardens, hayfields, beech-woods, all drenched with a week of
+ rain, past old-world villages, the railway runs to Sesenheim, alongside
+ the high road familiar to Goethe. We alight at the neat, clean, trim
+ station (in the matter of cleanliness the new <i>regime</i> bears the palm
+ over the old), and take the flooded road to the village. An old, bent,
+ wrinkled peasant woman, speaking French, directs us for full information
+ about Frédérique&mdash;thus is the name written in French&mdash;to the
+ auberge. First, with no little interest and pride, she unhooks from her
+ own wall a framed picture, containing portraits of Goethe, and Frederika,
+ and drawings of church and parsonage as they were. The former has been
+ restored and the latter wholly rebuilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we make our way to the little inn over against these, we pass a new
+ handsome communal school in course of erection. On questioning two
+ children in French, they shake their heads and pass on. The thought
+ naturally arises&mdash;did the various French Governments, throughout the
+ period of a hundred and odd years ending in 1870, do much in the way of
+ assimilating the German population of Alsace?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would not seem so, seeing that up till the Franco-Prussian war the
+ country folk retained their German speech, or at least patois. Under the
+ present rule only German is taught in communal schools, and in the
+ gymnasiums or lycées, two hours a week only being allowed for the teaching
+ of French. At the Auberge du Bouf, over against the church and parsonage,
+ we chat with the master in French about Goethe and Frederika; his
+ womankind, however, only spoke patois. Here, nevertheless, we find French
+ hearts, French sympathies, and occasionally French gaiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unidyllic, yet full of instruction, is the drive in the opposite direction
+ to Kehl. We are here approaching friendly frontiers, yet the aspect is
+ hardly less dreadful. True that cannon do not bristle on the outer line of
+ the triple fortifications; otherwise the state of things is similar. We
+ see lines of vast powder magazines, enormous barracks of recent
+ construction, preparations for defence, on a scale altogether
+ inconceivable and indescribable. Little wonder that meat is a shilling a
+ pound, instead of fourpence as before the annexation, that bread has
+ doubled in price, taxation also, and, to make matters worse, that trade
+ has remained persistently dull!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tremendous triple-arched, stone gate, guarded by sentinels, has been
+ erected on this side of the lower Rhine, over against the Duchy of Baden.
+ No sooner are we through than our hearts are rejoiced with signs of peace
+ and innocent enjoyment, restaurants and coffee gardens, family groups
+ resting under the trees. Beyond, flowing briskly amid wooded banks to
+ right and left, is the Rhine, a glorious sight, compensating for so many
+ that have just given us the heartache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Strasburg I will say little. Full descriptions of the new city, for
+ such an expression is no figure of speech, are given in the English,
+ French, and German guide books. The first care of the German Government
+ after coming into possession was to repair the havoc caused by the
+ bombardment, the rebuilding of public buildings, monuments and streets
+ that had been partially or entirely destroyed in 1871. Among these were
+ the Museum and Public Library, the Protestant church, several orphanages
+ and hospitals, lastly, incredible as it may seem, the beautiful octagonal
+ tower of the Cathedral. The incidents of this vandalism have just been
+ graphically described in the new volume of the brothers&rsquo; Margueritte prose
+ epic, dealing with the Franco-Prussian War, entitled &ldquo;Les Braves Gens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember writing on the occasion of my first visit to Strasburg, a few
+ years after these events&mdash;&ldquo;There is very little to see at Strasburg
+ now. The Library with its priceless treasures of books and manuscripts,
+ the Museum of painting and sculpture, rich in <i>chefs d&rsquo;oeuvre</i> of the
+ French school, the handsome Protestant church, the theatre, the Palais de
+ Justice, were all completely destroyed by the Prussian bombardment, not to
+ speak of buildings of lesser importance, four hundred private dwellings,
+ and hundreds of civilians killed and wounded by the shells. Nor was the
+ cathedral spared, and would doubtless have perished altogether also but
+ for the enforced surrender of the heroic city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that sad time a new Strasburg has sprung up, of which the University
+ is the central feature. A thousand students now frequent this great school
+ of learning, the professorial staff numbering a hundred. One noteworthy
+ point is the excessive cheapness of a learned or scientific education.
+ Autocratic Prussia emulates democratic France. I was assured by an
+ Alsatian who had graduated here that a year&rsquo;s fees need not exceed ten
+ pounds! Students board and lodge themselves outside the University, and,
+ of course, as economically as they please. They consist chiefly of
+ Germans, for sons of French parents of the middle and upper ranks are sent
+ over the frontier before the age of seventeen in order to evade the German
+ military service. They thus exile themselves for ever. This cruel
+ severance of family ties is, as I have said, one of the saddest effects of
+ annexation. Without and within, the group of buildings forming the
+ University is of great splendour. Alike architecture and decoration are on
+ a costly scale; the vast corridors with tesselated marble floors, marble
+ columns, domes covered with frescoes, statuary, stained glass, and gilded
+ panels, must impress the mind of the poorer students. Less agreeable is
+ the reflection of the taxpayer. This new Imperial quarter represents
+ millions of marks, whilst the defences of Strasburg alone represent many
+ millions more. One of the five facultés is devoted to Natural Science. The
+ Museum of Natural History, the mineralogical collections, and the chemical
+ laboratories have each their separate building, whilst at the extreme end
+ of the University gardens is the handsome new observatory, with covered
+ way leading to the equally handsome residence of the astronomer in charge.
+ Thus the learned star-gazer can reach his telescope under cover in wintry
+ weather. In addition to the University library described above, the
+ various class-rooms have each small separate libraries, sections of
+ history, literature, etc., on which the students can immediately lay their
+ hands. All the buildings are heated with gas or water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just beyond these precincts we come upon a striking contrast&mdash;row
+ after row of brand-new barracks, military bakeries, foundries, and stores;
+ piles of cannon balls, powder magazines, war material, one would think,
+ sufficient to blow up all Europe. Incongruous indeed is this juxtaposition
+ of a noble seat of learning and militarism only commensurate with barbaric
+ times. A good way off is the School of Medicine. This, indeed, owes little
+ or nothing to the new régime, having been founded by the French Government
+ long before 1870. It is a vast group of buildings, one of which can only
+ be glanced at with a shudder. My friend pointed out to me an annexe or
+ &ldquo;vivisection department.&rdquo; Here, as he expressed it, is maintained quite a
+ menagerie of unhappy animals destined for the tortures of the vivisector&rsquo;s
+ knife. The very thought sickened me, and I was glad to give up
+ sight-seeing and drop in for half-an-hour&rsquo;s chat with a charming old lady,
+ French to the backbone, living under the mighty shadow of the Cathedral.
+ She entertained me with her experiences during the bombardment, when
+ cooped up with a hundred persons, rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, all
+ passing fifteen days in a dark, damp cellar. Many horrible stories she
+ related, but somehow they seemed less horrible than the thought of tame,
+ timid, and even affectionate and intelligent creatures, slowly and
+ deliberately tortured to death, for the sake, forsooth, of what? Of this
+ corporeal frame man himself has done his best to vitiate and dishonour,
+ mere clayey envelope&mdash;so theologians tell us&mdash;of an immortal
+ soul!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strasburg, like Metz, is one vast camp, at the time of this second visit
+ the forty thousand soldiers in garrison here were away for the manoeuvres.
+ In another week or two the town would swarm with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will now say a few words about the administration of the annexed
+ provinces, a subject on which exists much misapprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have explained, no liberty, as we understand it, exists for the
+ French subjects of the German Emperor, neither freedom of speech, nor of
+ the press, nor of public meeting are enjoyed in Alsace and the portion of
+ Lorraine no longer French. A rigorous censorship of books as well as
+ newspapers is carried on. Even religious worship is under perpetual
+ surveillance. One by one French pastors and priests are supplanted by
+ their German brethren. A much respected pastor of Mulhouse, long resident
+ in that city and ardently French, told me some years ago that he expected
+ to be the last of his countrymen permitted to officiate. Police officers
+ wearing plain clothes attend the churches in which French is still
+ permitted on Sunday. There is nothing that can be called representative or
+ real parliamentary government. The Stadtholder or Governor is in reality a
+ dictator armed with autocratic powers. He can, at a moment&rsquo;s notice, expel
+ citizens, or stop newspapers. As to administration, it rests in the hands
+ of the State Secretariat or body of Ministers, three in number. There is a
+ pretence at home rule, but one fact suffices to explain its character and
+ working. Of the thirty members forming the local Reichstag, sitting at
+ Strasburg, fifteen are always named by the Stadtholder himself. This
+ little Chamber of Deputies deliberates upon provincial affairs, all Bills
+ having to pass the Chamber at Berlin and receive the Imperial sanction
+ before becoming law. As to the party of protest in the Reichstag itself,
+ formerly headed by the late Jean Dollfuss, I was assured that it had
+ ceased to exist. Years before, then burdened with the weight of care and
+ years, the great patriot of Mulhouse had said to me, &ldquo;I no longer take my
+ seat at Berlin. Of what good?&rdquo; And were he living still, that great and
+ good man, burning as was his patriotism, inextinguishable as was his love
+ for France, would doubtless echo the words I now heard on every lip,
+ &ldquo;Peace, peace; only let us have peace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst at Strasburg German has crowded out French, at Mulhouse I found
+ French still universally spoken. The prohibition of native speech in
+ schools is not only a domestic but a commercial grievance. As extensive
+ business relations exist between the two countries, especially near the
+ frontier, a knowledge of both French and German is really necessary to all
+ classes. Even tourists in Alsace-Lorraine nowadays fare badly without some
+ smattering of the latter language. Hotel-keepers especially look to the
+ winning side, and do their very utmost to Germanise their establishments.
+ Shopkeepers must live, and find it not only advantageous but necessary to
+ follow the same course. Sad indeed is the spectacle of Germanised France!
+ Nemesis here faces us in militarism, crushing the people with taxation and
+ profoundly shocking the best instincts of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion I must do justice to the extreme courtesy of German railway
+ and other officials. Many employés of railways and post offices&mdash;all,
+ be it remembered, Government officials&mdash;do not speak any French at
+ all, especially in out-of-the-way places. At the same time, all officials,
+ down to the rural postman, will do their very best to help out
+ French-speaking strangers with their own scant vocabulary of French words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Alsatian hosts, one and all, I found quite ready to do justice to the
+ authorities and their representatives, but, as I have insisted upon
+ before, an insuperable barrier, the fathomless gulf created by injustice,
+ exists between conquerors and conquered. And only last year dining with my
+ hosts of Germanised Lorraine in Paris, I asked them if in this respect
+ matters had changed for the better. The answer I received was categoric&mdash;&ldquo;Nothing
+ is changed since your visit to us. French and Germans remain apart as
+ before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;East of Paris&rdquo; has led me somewhat farther than I intended, but to a
+ lover of France, no less than to a French heart, France beyond the Vosges
+ is France still!
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE END.
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of East of Paris, by Matilda Betham-Edwards
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+</pre>
+
+ </body>
+</html>
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