THE COUNTRYSIDE
AND THE MAN
On a lovely spring morning in the
year 1829, a man of fifty or thereabouts was wending
his way on horseback along the mountain road that
leads to a large village near the Grande Chartreuse.
This village is the market town of a populous canton
that lies within the limits of a valley of some considerable
length. The melting of the snows had filled the
boulder-strewn bed of the torrent (often dry) that
flows through this valley, which is closely shut in
between two parallel mountain barriers, above which
the peaks of Savoy and of Dauphine tower on every
side.
All the scenery of the country that
lies between the chain of the two Mauriennes is very
much alike; yet here in the district through which
the stranger was traveling there are soft undulations
of the land, and varying effects of light which might
be sought for elsewhere in vain. Sometimes the
valley, suddenly widening, spreads out a soft irregularly-shaped
carpet of grass before the eyes; a meadow constantly
watered by the mountain streams that keep it fresh
and green at all seasons of the year. Sometimes
a roughly-built sawmill appears in a picturesque position,
with its stacks of long pine trunks with the bark
peeled off, and its mill stream, brought from the bed
of the torrent in great square wooden pipes, with
masses of dripping filament issuing from every crack.
Little cottages, scattered here and there, with their
gardens full of blossoming fruit trees, call up the
ideas that are aroused by the sight of industrious
poverty; while the thought of ease, secured after
long years of toil, is suggested by some larger houses
farther on, with their red roofs of flat round tiles,
shaped like the scales of a fish. There is no
door, moreover, that does not duly exhibit a basket
in which the cheeses are hung up to dry. Every
roadside and every croft is adorned with vines; which
here, as in Italy, they train to grow about dwarf elm
trees, whose leaves are stripped off to feed the cattle.
Nature, in her caprice, has brought
the sloping hills on either side so near together
in some places, that there is no room for fields, or
buildings, or peasants’ huts. Nothing lies
between them but the torrent, roaring over its waterfalls
between two lofty walls of granite that rise above
it, their sides covered with the leafage of tall beeches
and dark fir trees to the height of a hundred feet.
The trees, with their different kinds of foliage,
rise up straight and tall, fantastically colored by
patches of lichen, forming magnificent colonnades,
with a line of straggling hedgerow of guelder rose,
briar rose, box and arbutus above and below the roadway
at their feet. The subtle perfume of this undergrowth
was mingled just then with scents from the wild mountain
region and with the aromatic fragrance of young larch
shoots, budding poplars, and resinous pines.
Here and there a wreath of mist about
the heights sometimes hid and sometimes gave glimpses
of the gray crags, that seemed as dim and vague as
the soft flecks of cloud dispersed among them.
The whole face of the country changed every moment
with the changing light in the sky; the hues of the
mountains, the soft shades of their lower slopes,
the very shape of the valleys seemed to vary continually.
A ray of sunlight through the tree-stems, a clear
space made by nature in the woods, or a landslip here
and there, coming as a surprise to make a contrast
in the foreground, made up an endless series of pictures
delightful to see amid the silence, at the time of
year when all things grow young, and when the sun
fills a cloudless heaven with a blaze of light.
In short, it was a fair land—it was the
land of France!
The traveler was a tall man, dressed
from head to foot in a suit of blue cloth, which must
have been brushed just as carefully every morning
as the glossy coat of his horse. He held himself
firm and erect in the saddle like an old cavalry officer.
Even if his black cravat and doeskin gloves, the pistols
that filled his holsters, and the valise securely
fastened to the crupper behind him had not combined
to mark him out as a soldier, the air of unconcern
that sat on his face, his regular features (scarred
though they were with the smallpox), his determined
manner, self-reliant expression, and the way he held
his head, all revealed the habits acquired through
military discipline, of which a soldier can never
quite divest himself, even after he has retired from
service into private life.
Any other traveler would have been
filled with wonder at the loveliness of this Alpine
region, which grows so bright and smiling as it becomes
merged in the great valley systems of southern France;
but the officer, who no doubt had previously traversed
a country across which the French armies had been
drafted in the course of Napoleon’s wars, enjoyed
the view before him without appearing to be surprised
by the many changes that swept across it. It
would seem that Napoleon has extinguished in his soldiers
the sensation of wonder; for an impassive face is
a sure token by which you may know the men who served
erewhile under the short-lived yet deathless Eagles
of the great Emperor. The traveler was, in fact,
one of those soldiers (seldom met with nowadays) whom
shot and shell have respected, although they have borne
their part on every battlefield where Napoleon commanded.
There had been nothing unusual in
his life. He had fought valiantly in the ranks
as a simple and loyal soldier, doing his duty as faithfully
by night as by day, and whether in or out of his officer’s
sight. He had never dealt a sabre stroke in vain,
and was incapable of giving one too many. If
he wore at his buttonhole the rosette of an officer
of the Legion of Honor, it was because the unanimous
voice of his regiment had singled him out as the man
who best deserved to receive it after the battle of
Borodino.
He belonged to that small minority
of undemonstrative retiring natures, who are always
at peace with themselves, and who are conscious of
a feeling of humiliation at the mere thought of making
a request, no matter what its nature may be.
So promotion had come to him tardily, and by virtue
of the slowly-working laws of seniority. He had
been made a sub-lieutenant in 1802, but it was not
until 1829 that he became a major, in spite of the
grayness of his moustaches. His life had been
so blameless that no man in the army, not even the
general himself, could approach him without an involuntary
feeling of respect. It is possible that he was
not forgiven for this indisputable superiority by
those who ranked above him; but, on the other hand,
there was not one of his men that did not feel for
him something of the affection of children for a good
mother. For them he knew how to be at once indulgent
and severe. He himself had also once served in
the ranks, and knew the sorry joys and gaily-endured
hardships of the soldier’s lot. He knew
the errors that may be passed over and the faults
that must be punished in his men—“his
children,” as he always called them—and
when on campaign he readily gave them leave to forage
for provision for man and horse among the wealthier
classes.
His own personal history lay buried
beneath the deepest reserve. Like almost every
military man in Europe, he had only seen the world
through cannon smoke, or in the brief intervals of
peace that occurred so seldom during the Emperor’s
continual wars with the rest of Europe. Had he
or had he not thought of marriage? The question
remained unsettled. Although no one doubted that
Commandant Genestas had made conquests during his
sojourn in town after town and country after country
where he had taken part in the festivities given and
received by the officers, yet no one knew this for
a certainty. There was no prudery about him;
he would not decline to join a pleasure party; he
in no way offended against military standards; but
when questioned as to his affairs of the heart, he
either kept silence or answered with a jest.
To the words, “How are you, commandant?”
addressed to him by an officer over the wine, his
reply was, “Pass the bottle, gentlemen.”
M. Pierre Joseph Genestas was an unostentatious
kind of Bayard. There was nothing romantic nor
picturesque about him—he was too thoroughly
commonplace. His ways of living were those of
a well-to-do man. Although he had nothing beside
his pay, and his pension was all that he had to look
to in the future, the major always kept two years’
pay untouched, and never spent his allowances, like
some shrewd old men of business with whom cautious
prudence has almost become a mania. He was so
little of a gambler that if, when in company, some
one was wanted to cut in or to take a bet at ecarte,
he usually fixed his eyes on his boots; but though
he did not allow himself any extravagances, he conformed
in every way to custom.
His uniforms lasted longer than those
of any other officer in his regiment, as a consequence
of the sedulously careful habits that somewhat straitened
means had so instilled into him, that they had come
to be like a second nature. Perhaps he might have
been suspected of meannesss if it had not been for
the fact that with wonderful disinterestedness and
all a comrade’s readiness, his purse would be
opened for some harebrained boy who had ruined himself
at cards or by some other folly. He did a service
of this kind with such thoughtful tact, that it seemed
as though he himself had at one time lost heavy sums
at play; he never considered that he had any right
to control the actions of his debtor; he never made
mention of the loan. He was the child of his
company; he was alone in the world, so he had adopted
the army for his fatherland, and the regiment for
his family. Very rarely, therefore, did any one
seek the motives underlying his praiseworthy turn
for thrift; for it pleased others, for the most part,
to set it down to a not unnatural wish to increase
the amount of the savings that were to render his
old age comfortable. Till the eve of his promotion
to the rank of lieutenant-colonel of cavalry it was
fair to suppose that it was his ambition to retire
in the course of some campaign with a colonel’s
epaulettes and pension.
If Genestas’ name came up when
the officers gossiped after drill, they were wont
to classify him among the men who begin with taking
the good-conduct prize at school, and who, throughout
the term of their natural lives, continue to be punctilious,
conscientious, and passionless—as good
as white bread, and just as insipid. Thoughtful
minds, however, regarded him very differently.
Not seldom it would happen that a glance, or an expression
as full of significance as the utterance of a savage,
would drop from him and bear witness to past storms
in his soul; and a careful study of his placid brow
revealed a power of stifling down and repressing his
passions into inner depths, that had been dearly bought
by a lengthy acquaintance with the perils and disastrous
hazards of war. An officer who had only just joined
the regiment, the son of a peer of France, had said
one day of Genestas, that he would have made one of
the most conscientious of priests, or the most upright
of tradesmen.
“Add, the least of a courtier
among marquises,” put in Genestas, scanning
the young puppy, who did not know that his commandant
could overhear him.
There was a burst of laughter at the
words, for the lieutenant’s father cringed to
all the powers that be; he was a man of supple intellect,
accustomed to jump with every change of government,
and his son took after him.
Men like Genestas are met with now
and again in the French army; natures that show themselves
to be wholly great at need, and relapse into their
ordinary simplicity when the action is over; men that
are little mindful of fame and reputation, and utterly
forgetful of danger. Perhaps there are many more
of them than the shortcomings of our own characters
will allow us to imagine. Yet, for all that, any
one who believed that Genestas was perfect would be
strangely deceiving himself. The major was suspicious,
given to violent outbursts of anger, and apt to be
tiresome in argument; he was full of national prejudices,
and above all things, would insist that he was in
the right, when he was, as a matter of fact, in the
wrong. He retained the liking for good wine that
he had acquired in the ranks. If he rose from
a banquet with all the gravity befitting his position,
he seemed serious and pensive, and had no mind at
such times to admit any one into his confidence.
Finally, although he was sufficiently
acquainted with the customs of society and with the
laws of politeness, to which he conformed as rigidly
as if they had been military regulations; though he
had real mental power, both natural and acquired;
and although he had mastered the art of handling men,
the science of tactics, the theory of sabre play,
and the mysteries of the farrier’s craft, his
learning had been prodigiously neglected. He
knew in a hazy kind of way that Caesar was a Roman
Consul, or an Emperor, and that Alexander was either
a Greek or a Macedonian; he would have conceded either
quality or origin in both cases without discussion.
If the conversation turned on science or history,
he was wont to become thoughtful, and to confine his
share in it to little approving nods, like a man who
by dint of profound thought has arrived at scepticism.
When, at Schonbrunn, on May 13, 1809,
Napoleon wrote the bulletin addressed to the Grand
Army, then the masters of Vienna, in which he said
that like Medea, the Austrian princes had slain
their children with their own hands; Genestas,
who had been recently made a captain, did not wish
to compromise his newly conferred dignity by asking
who Medea was; he relied upon Napoleon’s character,
and felt quite sure that the Emperor was incapable
of making any announcement not in proper form to the
Grand Army and the House of Austria. So he thought
that Medea was some archduchess whose conduct was open
to criticism. Still, as the matter might have
some bearing on the art of war, he felt uneasy about
the Medea of the bulletin until a day arrived when
Mlle. Raucourt revived the tragedy of Medea.
The captain saw the placard, and did not fail to repair
to the Theatre Francais that evening, to see the celebrated
actress in her mythological role, concerning which
he gained some information from his neighbors.
A man, however, who as a private soldier
had possessed sufficient force of character to learn
to read, write, and cipher, could clearly understand
that as a captain he ought to continue his education.
So from this time forth he read new books and romances
with avidity, in this way gaining a half-knowledge,
of which he made a very fair use. He went so
far in his gratitude to his teachers as to undertake
the defence of Pigault-Lebrun, remarking that in his
opinion he was instructive and not seldom profound.
This officer, whose acquired practical
wisdom did not allow him to make any journey in vain,
had just come from Grenoble, and was on his way to
the Grande Chartreuse, after obtaining on the previous
evening a week’s leave of absence from his colonel.
He had not expected that the journey would be a long
one; but when, league after league, he had been misled
as to the distance by the lying statements of the
peasants, he thought it would be prudent not to venture
any farther without fortifying the inner man.
Small as were his chances of finding any housewife
in her dwelling at a time when every one was hard at
work in the fields, he stopped before a little cluster
of cottages that stood about a piece of land common
to all of them, more or less describing a square,
which was open to all comers.
The surface of the soil thus held
in conjoint ownership was hard and carefully swept,
but intersected by open drains. Roses, ivy, and
tall grasses grew over the cracked and disjointed
walls. Some rags were drying on a miserable currant
bush that stood at the entrance of the square.
A pig wallowing in a heap of straw was the first inhabitant
encountered by Genestas. At the sound of horse
hoofs the creature grunted, raised its head, and put
a great black cat to flight. A young peasant
girl, who was carrying a bundle of grass on her head,
suddenly appeared, followed at a distance by four
little brats, clad in rags, it is true, but vigorous,
sunburned, picturesque, bold-eyed, and riotous; thorough
little imps, looking like angels. The sun shone
down with an indescribable purifying influence upon
the air, the wretched cottages, the heaps of refuse,
and the unkempt little crew.
The soldier asked whether it was possible
to obtain a cup of milk. All the answer the girl
made him was a hoarse cry. An old woman suddenly
appeared on the threshold of one of the cabins, and
the young peasant girl passed on into a cowshed, with
a gesture that pointed out the aforesaid old woman,
towards whom Genestas went; taking care at the same
time to keep a tight hold on his horse, lest the children
who were already running about under his hoofs should
be hurt. He repeated his request, with which
the housewife flatly refused to comply. She would
not, she said, disturb the cream on the pans full of
milk from which butter was to be made. The officer
overcame this objection by undertaking to repay her
amply for the wasted cream, and then tied up his horse
at the door, and went inside the cottage.
The four children belonging to the
woman all appeared to be of the same age—an
odd circumstance which struck the commandant.
A fifth clung about her skirts; a weak, pale, sickly-looking
child, who doubtless needed more care than the others,
and who on that account was the best beloved, the
Benjamin of the family.
Genestas seated himself in a corner
by the fireless hearth. A sublime symbol met
his eyes on the high mantel-shelf above him—a
colored plaster cast of the Virgin with the Child
Jesus in her arms. Bare earth made the flooring
of the cottage. It had been beaten level in the
first instance, but in course of time it had grown
rough and uneven, so that though it was clean, its
ruggedness was not unlike that of the magnified rind
of an orange. A sabot filled with salt, a frying-pan,
and a large kettle hung inside the chimney. The
farther end of the room was completely filled by a
four-post bedstead, with a scalloped valance for decoration.
The walls were black; there was an opening to admit
the light above the worm-eaten door; and here and
there were a few stools consisting of rough blocks
of beech-wood, each set upon three wooden legs; a
hutch for bread, a large wooden dipper, a bucket and
some earthen milk-pans, a spinning-wheel on the top
of the bread-hutch, and a few wicker mats for draining
cheeses. Such were the ornaments and household
furniture of the wretched dwelling.
The officer, who had been absorbed
in flicking his riding-whip against the floor, presently
became a witness to a piece of by-play, all unsuspicious
though he was that any drama was about to unfold itself.
No sooner had the old woman, followed by her scald-headed
Benjamin, disappeared through a door that led into
her dairy, than the four children, after having stared
at the soldier as long as they wished, drove away
the pig by way of a beginning. This animal, their
accustomed playmate, having come as far as the threshold,
the little brats made such an energetic attack upon
him, that he was forced to beat a hasty retreat.
When the enemy had been driven without, the children
besieged the latch of a door that gave way before their
united efforts, and slipped out of the worn staple
that held it; and finally they bolted into a kind
of fruit-loft, where they very soon fell to munching
the dried plums, to the amusement of the commandant,
who watched this spectacle. The old woman, with
the face like parchment and the dirty ragged clothing,
came back at this moment, with a jug of milk for her
visitor in her hand.
“Oh! you good-for-nothings!” cried she.
She ran to the children, clutched
an arm of each child, bundled them into the room,
and carefully closed the door of her storeroom of
plenty. But she did not take their prunes away
from them.
“Now, then, be good, my pets!
If one did not look after them,” she went on,
looking at Genestas, “they would eat up the whole
lot of prunes, the madcaps!”
Then she seated herself on a three-legged
stool, drew the little weakling between her knees,
and began to comb and wash his head with a woman’s
skill and with motherly assiduity. The four small
thieves hung about. Some of them stood, others
leant against the bed or the bread-hutch. They
gnawed their prunes without saying a word, but they
kept their sly and mischievous eyes fixed upon the
stranger. In spite of grimy countenances and
noses that stood in need of wiping, they all looked
strong and healthy.
“Are they your children?”
the soldier asked the old woman.
“Asking your pardon, sir, they
are charity children. They give me three francs
a month and a pound’s weight of soap for each
of them.”
“But it must cost you twice
as much as that to keep them, good woman?”
“That is just what M. Benassis
tells me, sir; but if other folk will board the children
for the same money, one has to make it do. Nobody
wants the children, but for all that there is a good
deal of performance to go through before they will
let us have them. When the milk we give them
comes to nothing, they cost us scarcely anything.
Besides that, three francs is a great deal, sir; there
are fifteen francs coming in, to say nothing of the
five pounds’ weight of soap. In our part
of the world you would simply have to wear your life
out before you would make ten sous a day.”
“Then you have some land of
your own?” asked the commandant.
“No, sir. I had some land
once when my husband was alive; since he died I have
done so badly that I had to sell it”
“Why, how do you reach the year’s
end without debts?” Genestas went on, “when
you bring up children for a livelihood and wash and
feed them on two sous a day?”
“Well, we never go to St. Sylvester’s
Day without debt, sir,” she went on without
ceasing to comb the child’s hair. “But
so it is—Providence helps us out.
I have a couple of cows. Then my daughter and
I do some gleaning at harvest-time, and in winter
we pick up firewood. Then at night we spin.
Ah! we never want to see another winter like this last
one, that is certain! I owe the miller seventy-five
francs for flour. Luckily he is M. Benassis’
miller. M. Benassis, ah! he is a friend to poor
people. He has never asked for his due from anybody,
and he will not begin with us. Besides, our cow
has a calf, and that will set us a bit straighter.”
The four orphans for whom the old
woman’s affection represented all human guardianship
had come to an end of their prunes. As their
foster-mother’s attention was taken up by the
officer with whom she was chatting, they seized the
opportunity, and banded themselves together in a compact
file, so as to make yet another assault upon the latch
of the door that stood between them and the tempting
heap of dried plums. They advanced to the attack,
not like French soldiers, but as stealthily as Germans,
impelled by frank animal greediness.
“Oh! you little rogues! Do you want to
finish them up?”
The old woman rose, caught the strongest
of the four, administered a gentle slap on the back,
and flung him out of the house. Not a tear did
he shed, but the others remained breathless with astonishment.
“They give you a lot of trouble——”
“Oh! no, sir, but they can smell
the prunes, the little dears. If I were to leave
them alone here for a moment, they would stuff themselves
with them.”
“You are very fond of them?”
The old woman raised her head at this,
and looked at him with gentle malice in her eyes.
“Fond of them!” she said.
“I have had to part with three of them already.
I only have the care of them until they are six years
old,” she went on with a sigh.
“But where are your own children?”
“I have lost them.”
“How old are you?” Genestas
asked, to efface the impression left by his last question.
“I am thirty-eight years old,
sir. It will be two years come next St. John’s
Day since my husband died.”
She finished dressing the poor sickly
mite, who seemed to thank her by a loving look in
his faded eyes.
“What a life of toil and self-denial!”
thought the cavalry officer.
Beneath a roof worthy of the stable
wherein Jesus Christ was born, the hardest duties
of motherhood were fulfilled cheerfully and without
consciousness of merit. What hearts were these
that lay so deeply buried in neglect and obscurity!
What wealth, and what poverty! Soldiers, better
than other men, can appreciate the element of grandeur
to be found in heroism in sabots, in the Evangel clad
in rags. The Book may be found elsewhere, adorned,
embellished, tricked out in silk and satin and brocade,
but here, of a surety, dwelt the spirit of the Book.
It was impossible to doubt that Heaven had some holy
purpose underlying it all, at the sight of the woman
who had taken a mother’s lot upon herself, as
Jesus Christ had taken the form of a man, who gleaned
and suffered and ran into debt for her little waifs;
a woman who defrauded herself in her reckonings, and
would not own that she was ruining herself that she
might be a Mother. One was constrained to admit,
at the sight of her, that the good upon earth have
something in common with the angels in heaven; Commandant
Genestas shook his head as he looked at her.
“Is M. Benassis a clever doctor?” he asked
at last.
“I do not know, sir, but he cures poor people
for nothing.”
“It seems to me that this is
a man and no mistake!” he went on, speaking
to himself.
“Oh! yes, sir, and a good man
too! There is scarcely any one hereabouts that
does not put his name in their prayers, morning and
night!”
“That is for you, mother,”
said the soldier, as he gave her several coins, “and
that is for the children,” he went on, as he
added another crown. “Is M. Benassis’
house still a long way off?” he asked, when he
had mounted his horse.
“Oh! no, sir, a bare league at most.”
The commandant set out, fully persuaded
that two leagues remained ahead of him. Yet after
all he soon caught a glimpse through the trees of
the little town’s first cluster of houses, and
then of all the roofs that crowded about a conical
steeple, whose slates were secured to the angles of
the wooden framework by sheets of tin that glittered
in the sun. This sort of roof, which has a peculiar
appearance, denotes the nearness of the borders of
Savoy, where it is very common. The valley is
wide at this particular point, and a fair number of
houses pleasantly situated, either in the little plain
or along the side of the mountain stream, lend human
interest to the well-tilled spot, a stronghold with
no apparent outlet among the mountains that surround
it.
It was noon when Genestas reined in
his horse beneath an avenue of elm-trees half-way
up the hillside, and only a few paces from the town,
to ask the group of children who stood before him for
M. Benassis’ house. At first the children
looked at each other, then they scrutinized the stranger
with the expression that they usually wear when they
set eyes upon anything for the first time; a different
curiosity and a different thought in every little face.
Then the boldest and the merriest of the band, a little
bright-eyed urchin, with bare, muddy feet, repeated
his words over again, in child fashion.
“M. Benassis’ house,
sir?” adding, “I will show you the way
there.”
He walked along in front of the horse,
prompted quite as much by a wish to gain a kind of
importance by being in the stranger’s company,
as by a child’s love of being useful, or the
imperative craving to be doing something, that possesses
mind and body at his age. The officer followed
him for the entire length of the principal street of
the country town. The way was paved with cobblestones,
and wound in and out among the houses, which their
owners had erected along its course in the most arbitrary
fashion. In one place a bake-house had been built
out into the middle of the roadway; in another a gable
protruded, partially obstructing the passage, and yet
farther on a mountain stream flowed across it in a
runnel. Genestas noticed a fair number of roofs
of tarred shingle, but yet more of them were thatched;
a few were tiled, and some seven or eight (belonging
no doubt to the cure, the justice of the peace, and
some of the wealthier townsmen) were covered with
slates. There was a total absence of regard for
appearances befitting a village at the end of the world,
which had nothing beyond it, and no connection with
any other place. The people who lived in it seemed
to belong to one family that dwelt beyond the limits
of the bustling world, with which the collector of
taxes and a few ties of the very slenderest alone
served to connect them.
When Genestas had gone a step or two
farther, he saw on the mountain side a broad road
that rose above the village. Clearly there must
be an old town and a new town; and, indeed, when the
commandant reached a spot where he could slacken the
pace of his horse, he could easily see between the
houses some well-built dwellings whose new roofs brightened
the old-fashioned village. An avenue of trees
rose above these new houses, and from among them came
the confused sounds of several industries. He
heard the songs peculiar to busy toilers, a murmur
of many workshops, the rasping of files, and the sound
of falling hammers. He saw the thin lines of
smoke from the chimneys of each household, and the
more copious outpourings from the forges of the van-builder,
the blacksmith, and the farrier. At length, at
the very end of the village towards which his guide
was taking him, Genestas beheld scattered farms and
well-tilled fields and plantations of trees in thorough
order. It might have been a little corner of
Brie, so hidden away in a great fold of the land, that
at first sight its existence would not be suspected
between the little town and the mountains that closed
the country round.
Presently the child stopped.
“There is the door of his house,”
he remarked.
The officer dismounted and passed
his arm through the bridle. Then, thinking that
the laborer is worthy of his hire, he drew a few sous
from his waistcoat pocket, and held them out to the
child, who looked astonished at this, opened his eyes
very wide, and stayed on, without thanking him, to
watch what the stranger would do next.
“Civilization has not made much
headway hereabouts,” thought Genestas; “the
religion of work is in full force, and begging has
not yet come thus far.”
His guide, more from curiosity than
from any interested motive, propped himself against
the wall that rose to the height of a man’s
elbow. Upon this wall, which enclosed the yard
belonging to the house, there ran a black wooden railing
on either side of the square pillars of the gates.
The lower part of the gates themselves was of solid
wood that had been painted gray at some period in
the past; the upper part consisted of a grating of
yellowish spear-shaped bars. These decorations,
which had lost all their color, gradually rose on either
half of the gates till they reached the centre where
they met; their spikes forming, when both leaves were
shut, an outline similar to that of a pine-cone.
The worm-eaten gates themselves, with their patches
of velvet lichen, were almost destroyed by the alternate
action of sun and rain. A few aloe plants and
some chance-sown pellitory grew on the tops of the
square pillars of the gates, which all but concealed
the stems of a couple of thornless acacias that raised
their tufted spikes, like a pair of green powder-puffs,
in the yard.
The condition of the gateway revealed
a certain carelessness of its owner which did not
seem to suit the officer’s turn of mind.
He knitted his brows like a man who is obliged to
relinquish some illusion. We usually judge others
by our own standard; and although we indulgently forgive
our own shortcomings in them, we condemn them harshly
for the lack of our special virtues. If the commandant
had expected M. Benassis to be a methodical or practical
man, there were unmistakable indications of absolute
indifference as to his material concerns in the state
of the gates of his house. A soldier possessed
by Genestas’ passion for domestic economy could
not help at once drawing inferences as to the life
and character of its owner from the gateway before
him; and this, in spite of his habits of circumspection,
he in nowise failed to do. The gates were left
ajar, moreover—another piece of carelessness!
Encouraged by this countrified trust
in all comers, the officer entered the yard without
ceremony, and tethered his horse to the bars of the
gate. While he was knotting the bridle, a neighing
sound from the stable caused both horse and rider
to turn their eyes involuntarily in that direction.
The door opened, and an old servant put out his head.
He wore a red woolen bonnet, exactly like the Phrygian
cap in which Liberty is tricked out, a piece of head-gear
in common use in this country.
As there was room for several horses,
this worthy individual, after inquiring whether Genestas
had come to see M. Benassis, offered the hospitality
of the stable to the newly-arrived steed, a very fine
animal, at which he looked with an expression of admiring
affection. The commandant followed his horse
to see how things were to go with it. The stable
was clean, there was plenty of litter, and there was
the same peculiar air of sleek content about M. Benassis’
pair of horses that distinguished the cure’s
horse from all the rest of his tribe. A maid-servant
from within the house came out upon the flight of
steps and waited. She appeared to be the proper
authority to whom the stranger’s inquiries were
to be addressed, although the stableman had already
told him that M. Benassis was not at home.
“The master has gone to the
flour-mill,” said he. “If you like
to overtake him, you have only to go along the path
that leads to the meadow; and the mill is at the end
of it.”
Genestas preferred seeing the country
to waiting about indefinitely for Benassis’
return, so he set out along the way that led to the
flour-mill. When he had gone beyond the irregular
line traced by the town upon the hillside, he came
in sight of the mill and the valley, and of one of
the loveliest landscapes that he had ever seen.
The mountains bar the course of the
river, which forms a little lake at their feet, and
raise their crests above it, tier on tier. Their
many valleys are revealed by the changing hues of the
light, or by the more or less clear outlines of the
mountain ridges fledged with their dark forests of
pines. The mill had not long been built.
It stood just where the mountain stream fell into
the little lake. There was all the charm about
it peculiar to a lonely house surrounded by water and
hidden away behind the heads of a few trees that love
to grow by the water-side. On the farther bank
of the river, at the foot of a mountain, with a faint
red glow of sunset upon its highest crest, Genestas
caught a glimpse of a dozen deserted cottages.
All the windows and doors had been taken away, and
sufficiently large holes were conspicuous in the dilapidated
roofs, but the surrounding land was laid out in fields
that were highly cultivated, and the old garden spaces
had been turned into meadows, watered by a system of
irrigation as artfully contrived as that in use in
Limousin. Unconsciously the commandant paused
to look at the ruins of the village before him.
How is it that men can never behold
any ruins, even of the humblest kind, without feeling
deeply stirred? Doubtless it is because they
seem to be a typical representation of evil fortune
whose weight is felt so differently by different natures.
The thought of death is called up by a churchyard,
but a deserted village puts us in mind of the sorrows
of life; death is but one misfortune always foreseen,
but the sorrows of life are infinite. Does not
the thought of the infinite underlie all great melancholy?
The officer reached the stony path
by the mill-pond before he could hit upon an explanation
of this deserted village. The miller’s lad
was sitting on some sacks of corn near the door of
the house. Genestas asked for M. Benassis.
“M. Benassis went over
there,” said the miller, pointing out one of
the ruined cottages.
“Has the village been burned
down?” asked the commandant.
“No, sir.”
“Then how did it come to be in this state?”
inquired Genestas.
“Ah! how?” the miller
answered, as he shrugged his shoulders and went indoors;
“M. Benassis will tell you that.”
The officer went over a rough sort
of bridge built up of boulders taken from the torrent
bed, and soon reached the house that had been pointed
out to him. The thatched roof of the dwelling
was still entire; it was covered with moss indeed,
but there were no holes in it, and the door and its
fastenings seemed to be in good repair. Genestas
saw a fire on the hearth as he entered, an old woman
kneeling in the chimney-corner before a sick man seated
in a chair, and another man, who was standing with
his face turned toward the fireplace. The house
consisted of a single room, which was lighted by a
wretched window covered with linen cloth. The
floor was of beaten earth; the chair, a table, and
a truckle-bed comprised the whole of the furniture.
The commandant had never seen anything so poor and
bare, not even in Russia, where the moujik’s
huts are like the dens of wild beasts. Nothing
within it spoke of ordinary life; there were not even
the simplest appliances for cooking food of the commonest
description. It might have been a dog-kennel
without a drinking-pan. But for the truckle-bed,
a smock-frock hanging from a nail, and some sabots
filled with straw, which composed the invalid’s
entire wardrobe, this cottage would have looked as
empty as the others. The aged peasant woman upon
her knees was devoting all her attention to keeping
the sufferer’s feet in a tub filled with a brown
liquid. Hearing a footstep and the clank of spurs,
which sounded strangely in ears accustomed to the
plodding pace of country folk, the man turned to Genestas.
A sort of surprise, in which the old woman shared
was visible in his face.
“There is no need to ask if
you are M. Benassis,” said the soldier.
“You will pardon me, sir, if, as a stranger impatient
to see you, I have come to seek you on your field
of battle, instead of awaiting you at your house.
Pray do not disturb yourself; go on with what you are
doing. When it is over, I will tell you the purpose
of my visit.”
Genestas half seated himself upon
the edge of the table, and remained silent. The
firelight shone more brightly in the room than the
faint rays of the sun, for the mountain crests intercepted
them, so that they seldom reached this corner of the
valley. A few branches of resinous pinewood made
a bright blaze, and it was by the light of this fire
that the soldier saw the face of the man towards whom
he was drawn by a secret motive, by a wish to seek
him out, to study and to know him thoroughly well.
M. Benassis, the local doctor, heard Genestas with
indifference, and with folded arms he returned his
bow, and went back to his patient, quite unaware that
he was being subjected to a scrutiny as earnest as
that which the soldier turned upon him.
Benassis was a man of ordinary height,
broad-shouldered and deep-chested. A capacious
green overcoat, buttoned up to the chin, prevented
the officer from observing any characteristic details
of his personal appearance; but his dark and motionless
figure served as a strong relief to his face, which
caught the bright light of the blazing fire.
The face was not unlike that of a satyr; there was
the same slightly protruding forehead, full, in this
case, of prominences, all more or less denoting character;
the same turned-up nose, with a sprightly cleavage
at the tip; the same high cheek-bones. The lines
of the mouth were crooked; the lips, thick and red.
The chin turned sharply upwards. There was an
alert, animated look in the brown eyes, to which their
pearly whites gave great brightness, and which expressed
passions now subdued. His iron-gray hair, the
deep wrinkles in his face, the bushy eyebrows that
had grown white already, the veins on his protuberant
nose, the tanned face covered with red blotches, everything
about him, in short, indicated a man of fifty and
the hard work of his profession. The officer could
come to no conclusion as to the capacity of the head,
which was covered by a close cap; but hidden though
it was, it seemed to him to be one of the square-shaped
kind that gave rise to the expression “square-headed.”
Genestas was accustomed to read the indications that
mark the features of men destined to do great things,
since he had been brought into close relations with
the energetic natures sought out by Napoleon; so he
suspected that there must be some mystery in this life
of obscurity, and said to himself as he looked at
the remarkable face before him:
“How comes it that he is still a country doctor?”
When he had made a careful study of
this countenance, that, in spite of its resemblance
to other human faces, revealed an inner life nowise
in harmony with a commonplace exterior, he could not
help sharing the doctor’s interest in his patient;
and the sight of that patient completely changed the
current of his thoughts.
Much as the old cavalry officer had
seen in the course of his soldier’s career,
he felt a thrill of surprise and horror at the sight
of a human face which could never have been lighted
up with thought—a livid face in which a
look of dumb suffering showed so plainly—the
same look that is sometimes worn by a child too young
to speak, and too weak to cry any longer; in short,
it was the wholly animal face of an old dying cretin.
The cretin was the one variety of the human species
with which the commandant had not yet come in contact.
At the sight of the deep, circular folds of skin on
the forehead, the sodden, fish-like eyes, and the
head, with its short, coarse, scantily-growing hair—a
head utterly divested of all the faculties of the senses—who
would not have experienced, as Genestas did, an instinctive
feeling of repulsion for a being that had neither
the physical beauty of an animal nor the mental endowments
of man, who was possessed of neither instinct nor
reason, and who had never heard nor spoken any kind
of articulate speech? It seemed difficult to
expend any regrets over the poor wretch now visibly
drawing towards the very end of an existence which
had not been life in any sense of the word; yet the
old woman watched him with touching anxiety, and was
rubbing his legs where the hot water did not reach
them with as much tenderness as if he had been her
husband. Benassis himself, after a close scrutiny
of the dull eyes and corpse-like face, gently took
the cretin’s hand and felt his pulse.
“The bath is doing no good,”
he said, shaking his head; “let us put him to
bed again.”
He lifted the inert mass himself,
and carried him across to the truckle-bed, from whence,
no doubt, he had just taken him. Carefully he
laid him at full length, and straightened the limbs
that were growing cold already, putting the head and
hand in position, with all the heed that a mother
could bestow upon her child.
“It is all over, death is very
near,” added Benassis, who remained standing
by the bedside.
The old woman gazed at the dying form,
with her hands on her hips. A few tears stole
down her cheeks. Genestas remained silent.
He was unable to explain to himself how it was that
the death of a being that concerned him so little
should affect him so much. Unconsciously he shared
the feeling of boundless pity that these hapless creatures
excite among the dwellers in the sunless valleys wherein
Nature has placed them. This sentiment has degenerated
into a kind of religious superstition in families
to which cretins belong; but does it not spring from
the most beautiful of Christian virtues—from
charity, and from a belief in a reward hereafter,
that most effectual support of our social system,
and the one thought that enables us to endure our
miseries? The hope of inheriting eternal bliss
helps the relations of these unhappy creatures and
all others round about them to exert on a large scale,
and with sublime devotion, a mother’s ceaseless
protecting care over an apathetic creature who does
not understand it in the first instance, and who in
a little while forgets it all. Wonderful power
of religion! that has brought a blind beneficence to
the aid of an equally blind misery. Wherever cretins
exist, there is a popular belief that the presence
of one of these creatures brings luck to a family—a
superstition that serves to sweeten lives which, in
the midst of a town population, would be condemned
by a mistaken philanthropy to submit to the harsh
discipline of an asylum. In the higher end of
the valley of Isere, where cretins are very numerous,
they lead an out-of-door life with the cattle which
they are taught to herd. There, at any rate,
they are at large, and receive the reverence due to
misfortune.
A moment later the village bell clinked
at slow regular intervals, to acquaint the flock with
the death of one of their number. In the sound
that reached the cottage but faintly across the intervening
space, there was a thought of religion which seemed
to fill it with a melancholy peace. The tread
of many feet echoed up the road, giving notice of
an approaching crowd of people—a crowd that
uttered not a word. Then suddenly the chanting
of the Church broke the stillness, calling up the
confused thoughts that take possession of the most
sceptical minds, and compel them to yield to the influence
of the touching harmonies of the human voice.
The Church was coming to the aid of a creature that
knew her not. The cure appeared, preceded by a
choir-boy, who bore the crucifix, and followed by the
sacristan carrying the vase of holy water, and by
some fifty women, old men, and children, who had all
come to add their prayers to those of the Church.
The doctor and the soldier looked at each other, and
silently withdrew to a corner to make room for the
kneeling crowd within and without the cottage.
During the consoling ceremony of the Viaticum, celebrated
for one who had never sinned, but to whom the Church
on earth was bidding a last farewell, there were signs
of real sorrow on most of the rough faces of the gathering,
and tears flowed over the rugged cheeks that sun and
wind and labor in the fields had tanned and wrinkled.
The sentiment of voluntary kinship was easy to explain.
There was not one in the place who had not pitied the
unhappy creature, not one who would not have given
him his daily bread. Had he not met with a father’s
care from every child, and found a mother in the merriest
little girl?
“He is dead!” said the cure.
The words struck his hearers with
the most unfeigned dismay. The tall candles were
lighted, and several people undertook to watch with
the dead that night. Benassis and the soldier
went out. A group of peasants in the doorway
stopped the doctor to say:
“Ah! if you have not saved his
life, sir, it was doubtless because God wished to
take him to Himself.”
“I did my best, children,” the doctor
answered.
When they had come a few paces from
the deserted village, whose last inhabitant had just
died, the doctor spoke to Genestas.
“You would not believe, sir,
what real solace is contained for me in what those
peasants have just said. Ten years ago I was very
nearly stoned to death in this village. It is
empty to-day, but thirty families lived in it then.”
Genestas’ face and gesture so
plainly expressed an inquiry, that, as they went along,
the doctor told him the story promised by this beginning.
“When I first settled here,
sir, I found a dozen cretins in this part of the canton,”
and the doctor turned round to point out the ruined
cottages for the officer’s benefit. “All
the favorable conditions for spreading the hideous
disease are there; the air is stagnant, the hamlet
lies in the valley bottom, close beside a torrent supplied
with water by the melted snows, and the sunlight only
falls on the mountain-top, so that the valley itself
gets no good of the sun. Marriages among these
unfortunate creatures are not forbidden by law, and
in this district they are protected by superstitious
notions, of whose power I had no conception—superstitions
which I blamed at first, and afterwards came to admire.
So cretinism was in a fair way to spread all over
the valley from this spot. Was it not doing the
country a great service to put a stop to this mental
and physical contagion? But imperatively as the
salutary changes were required, they might cost the
life of any man who endeavored to bring them about.
Here, as in other social spheres, if any good is to
be done, we come into collision not merely with vested
interests, but with something far more dangerous to
meddle with—religious ideas crystallized
into superstitions, the most permanent form taken by
human thought. I feared nothing.
“In the first place, I sought
for the position of mayor in the canton, and in this
I succeeded. Then, after obtaining a verbal sanction
from the prefect, and by paying down the money, I
had several of these unfortunate creatures transported
over to Aiguebelle, in Savoy, by night. There
are a great many of them there, and they were certain
to be very kindly treated. When this act of humanity
came to be known, the whole countryside looked upon
me as a monster. The cure preached against me.
In spite of all the pains I took to explain to all
the shrewder heads of the little place the immense
importance of being rid of the idiots, and in spite
of the fact that I gave my services gratuitously to
the sick people of the district, a shot was fired at
me from the corner of a wood.
“I went to the Bishop of Grenoble
and asked him to change the cure. Monseigneur
was good enough to allow me to choose a priest who
would share in my labors, and it was my happy fortune
to meet with one of those rare natures that seemed
to have dropped down from heaven. Then I went
on with my enterprise. After preparing people’s
minds, I made another transportation by night, and
six more cretins were taken away. In this second
attempt I had the support of several people to whom
I had rendered some service, and I was backed by the
members of the Communal Council, for I had appealed
to their parsimonious instincts, showing them how
much it cost to support the poor wretches, and pointing
out how largely they might gain by converting their
plots of ground (to which the idiots had no proper
title) into allotments which were needed in the township.
“All the rich were on my side;
but the poor, the old women, the children, and a few
pig-headed people were violently opposed to me.
Unluckily it so fell out that my last removal had not
been completely carried out. The cretin whom
you have just seen, not having returned to his house,
had not been taken away, so that the next morning he
was the sole remaining example of his species in the
village. There were several families still living
there; but though they were little better than idiots,
they were, at any rate, free from the taint of cretinism.
I determined to go through with my work, and came
officially in open day to take the luckless creature
from his dwelling. I had no sooner left my house
than my intention got abroad. The cretin’s
friends were there before me, and in front of his hovel
I found a crowd of women and children and old people,
who hailed my arrival with insults accompanied by
a shower of stones.
“In the midst of the uproar
I should perhaps have fallen a victim to the frenzy
that possesses a crowd excited by its own outcries
and stirred up by one common feeling, but the cretin
saved my life! The poor creature came out of
his hut, and raised the clucking sound of his voice.
He seemed to be an absolute ruler over the fanatical
mob, for the sight of him put a sudden stop to the
clamor. It occurred to me that I might arrange
a compromise, and thanks to the quiet so opportunely
restored, I was able to propose and explain it.
Of course, those who approved of my schemes would
not dare to second me in this emergency, their support
was sure to be of a purely passive kind, while these
superstitious folk would exert the most active vigilance
to keep their last idol among them; it was impossible,
it seemed to me, to take him away from them.
So I promised to leave the cretin in peace in his
dwelling, with the understanding that he should live
quite by himself, and that the remaining families in
the village should cross the stream and come to live
in the town, in some new houses which I myself undertook
to build, adding to each house a piece of ground for
which the Commune was to repay me later on.
“Well, my dear sir, it took
me fully six months to overcome their objection to
this bargain, however much it may have been to the
advantage of the village families. The affection
which they have for their wretched hovels in country
districts is something quite unexplainable. No
matter how unwholesome his hovel may be, a peasant
clings far more to it than a banker does to his mansion.
The reason of it? That I do not know. Perhaps
thoughts and feelings are strongest in those who have
but few of them, simply because they have but few.
Perhaps material things count for much in the lives
of those who live so little in thought; certain it
is that the less they have, the dearer their possessions
are to them. Perhaps, too, it is with the peasant
as with the prisoner—he does not squander
the powers of his soul, he centres them all upon a
single idea, and this is how his feelings come to
be so exceedingly strong. Pardon these reflections
on the part of a man who seldom exchanges ideas with
any one. But, indeed, you must not suppose, sir,
that I am much taken up with these far-fetched considerations.
We all have to be active and practical here.
“Alas! the fewer ideas these
poor folk have in their heads, the harder it is to
make them see where their real interests lie.
There was nothing for it but to give my whole attention
to every trifling detail of my enterprise. One
and all made me the same answer, one of those sayings,
filled with homely sense, to which there is no possible
reply, ‘But your houses are not yet built, sir!’
they used to say. ‘Very good,’ said
I, ’promise me that as soon as they are finished
you will come and live in them.’
“Luckily, sir, I obtained a
decision to the effect that the whole of the mountain
side above the now deserted village was the property
of the township. The sum of money brought in
by the woods on the higher slopes paid for the building
of the new houses and for the land on which they stood.
They were built forthwith; and when once one of my
refractory families was fairly settled in, the rest
of them were not slow to follow. The benefits
of the change were so evident that even the most bigoted
believer in the village, which you might call soulless
as well as sunless, could not but appreciate them.
The final decision in this matter, which gave some
property to the Commune, in the possession of which
we were confirmed by the Council of State, made me
a person of great importance in the canton. But
what a lot of worry there was over it!” the
doctor remarked, stopping short, and raising a hand
which he let fall again—a gesture that spoke
volumes. “No one knows, as I do, the distance
between the town and the Prefecture—whence
nothing comes out—and from the Prefecture
to the Council of State—where nothing can
be got in.
“Well, after all,” he
resumed, “peace be to the powers of this world!
They yielded to my importunities, and that is saying
a great deal. If you only knew the good that
came of a carelessly scrawled signature! Why,
sir, two years after I had taken these momentous trifles
in hand, and had carried the matter through to the
end, every poor family in the Commune had two cows
at least, which they pastured on the mountain side,
where (without waiting this time for an authorization
from the Council of State) I had established a system
of irrigation by means of cross trenches, like those
in Switzerland, Auvergne, and Limousin. Much
to their astonishment, the townspeople saw some capital
meadows springing up under their eyes, and thanks
to the improvement in the pasturage, the yield of
milk was very much larger. The results of this
triumph were great indeed. Every one followed
the example set by my system of irrigation; cattle
were multiplied; the area of meadow land and every
kind of out-turn increased. I had nothing to fear
after that. I could continue my efforts to improve
this, as yet, untilled corner of the earth; and to
civilize those who dwelt in it, whose minds had hitherto
lain dormant.
“Well, sir, folk like us, who
live out of the world, are very talkative. If
you ask us a question, there is no knowing where the
answer will come to an end; but to cut it short—there
were about seven hundred souls in the valley when
I came to it, and now the population numbers some
two thousand. I had gained the good opinion of
every one in that matter of the last cretin; and when
I had constantly shown that I could rule both mildly
and firmly, I became a local oracle. I did everything
that I could to win their confidence; I did not ask
for it, nor did I appear to seek it; but I tried to
inspire every one with the deepest respect for my
character, by the scrupulous way in which I always
fulfilled my engagements, even when they were of the
most trifling kind. When I had pledged myself
to care for the poor creature whose death you have
just witnessed, I looked after him much more effectually
than any of his previous guardians had done. He
has been fed and cared for as the adopted child of
the Commune. After a time the dwellers in the
valley ended by understanding the service which I
had done them in spite of themselves, but for all that,
they still cherish some traces of that old superstition
of theirs. Far be it from me to blame them for
it; has not their cult of the cretin often furnished
me with an argument when I have tried to induce those
who had possession of their faculties to help the unfortunate?
But here we are,” said Benassis, when after
a moment’s pause he saw the roof of his own
house.
Far from expecting the slightest expression
of praise or of thanks from his listener, it appeared
from his way of telling the story of this episode
in his administrative career, that he had been moved
by an unconscious desire to pour out the thoughts
that filled his mind, after the manner of folk that
live very retired lives.
“I have taken the liberty of
putting my horse in your stable, sir,” said
the commandant, “for which in your goodness you
will perhaps pardon me when you learn the object of
my journey hither.”
“Ah! yes, what is it?”
asked Benassis, appearing to shake off his preoccupied
mood, and to recollect that his companion was a stranger
to him. The frankness and unreserve of his nature
had led him to accept Genestas as an acquaintance.
“I have heard of the almost
miraculous recovery of M. Gravier of Grenoble, whom
you received into your house,” was the soldier’s
answer. “I have come to you, hoping that
you will give a like attention to my case, although
I have not a similar claim to your benevolence; and
yet, I am possibly not undeserving of it. I am
an old soldier, and wounds of long standing give me
no peace. It will take you at least a week to
study my condition, for the pain only comes back at
intervals, and——”
“Very good, sir,” Benassis
broke in; “M. Gravier’s room is in
readiness. Come in.”
They went into the house, the doctor
flinging open the door with an eagerness that Genestas
attributed to his pleasure at receiving a boarder.
“Jacquotte!” Benassis
called out. “This gentleman will dine with
us.”
“But would it not be as well
for us to settle about the payment?”
“Payment for what?” inquired the doctor.
“For my board. You cannot keep me and my
horse as well, without——”
“If you are wealthy, you will
repay me amply,” Benassis replied; “and
if you are not, I will take nothing whatever.”
“Nothing whatever seems to me
to be too dear,” said Genestas. “But,
rich or poor, will ten francs a day (not including
your professional services) be acceptable to you?”
“Nothing could be less acceptable
to me than payment for the pleasure of entertaining
a visitor,” the doctor answered, knitting his
brows; “and as to my advice, you shall have
it if I like you, and not unless. Rich people
shall not have my time by paying for it; it belongs
exclusively to the folk here in the valley. I
do not care about fame or fortune, and I look for
neither praise or gratitude from my patients.
Any money which you may pay me will go to the druggists
in Grenoble, to pay for the medicine required by the
poor of the neighborhood.”
Any one who had heard the words flung
out, abruptly, it is true, but without a trace of
bitterness in them, would have said to himself with
Genestas, “Here is a man made of good human clay.”
“Well, then, I will pay you
ten francs a day, sir,” the soldier answered,
returning to the charge with wonted pertinacity, “and
you will do as you choose after that. We shall
understand each other better, now that the question
is settled,” he added, grasping the doctor’s
hand with eager cordiality. “In spite of
my ten francs, you shall see that I am by no means
a Tartar.”
After this passage of arms, in which
Benassis showed not the slightest sign of a wish to
appear generous or to pose as a philanthropist, the
supposed invalid entered his doctor’s house.
Everything within it was in keeping with the ruinous
state of the gateway, and with the clothing worn by
its owner. There was an utter disregard for everything
not essentially useful, which was visible even in the
smallest trifles. Benassis took Genestas through
the kitchen, that being the shortest way to the dining-room.
Had the kitchen belonged to an inn,
it could not have been more smoke-begrimed; and if
there was a sufficiency of cooking pots within its
precincts, this lavish supply was Jacquotte’s
doing—Jacquotte who had formerly been the
cure’s housekeeper—Jacquotte who always
said “we,” and who ruled supreme over
the doctor’s household. If, for instance,
there was a brightly polished warming-pan above the
mantelshelf, it probably hung there because Jacquotte
liked to sleep warm of a winter night, which led her
incidentally to warm her master’s sheets.
He never took a thought about anything; so she was
wont to say.
It was on account of a defect, which
any one else would have found intolerable, that Benassis
had taken her into his service. Jacquotte had
a mind to rule the house, and a woman who would rule
his house was the very person that the doctor wanted.
So Jacquotte bought and sold, made alterations about
the place, set up and took down, arranged and disarranged
everything at her own sweet will; her master had never
raised a murmur. Over the yard, the stable, the
man-servant and the kitchen, in fact, over the whole
house and garden and its master, Jacquotte’s
sway was absolute. She looked out fresh linen,
saw to the washing, and laid in provisions without
consulting anybody. She decided everything that
went on in the house, and the date when the pigs were
to be killed. She scolded the gardener, decreed
the menu at breakfast and dinner, and went from cellar
to garret, and from garret to cellar, setting everything
to rights according to her notions, without a word
of opposition of any sort or description. Benassis
had made but two stipulations—he wished
to dine at six o’clock, and that the household
expenses should not exceed a certain fixed sum every
month.
A woman whom every one obeys in this
way is always singing, so Jacquotte laughed and warbled
on the staircase; she was always humming something
when she was not singing, and singing when she was
not humming. Jacquotte had a natural liking for
cleanliness, so she kept the house neat and clean.
If her tastes had been different, it would have been
a sad thing for M. Benassis (so she was wont to say),
for the poor man was so little particular that you
might feed him on cabbage for partridges, and he would
not find it out; and if it were not for her, he would
very often wear the same shirt for a week on end.
Jacquotte, however, was an indefatigable folder of
linen, a born rubber and polisher of furniture, and
a passionate lover of a perfectly religious and ceremonial
cleanliness of the most scrupulous, the most radiant,
and most fragrant kind. A sworn foe to dust, she
swept and scoured and washed without ceasing.
The condition of the gateway caused
her acute distress. On the first day of every
month for the past ten years, she had extorted from
her master a promise that he would replace the gate
with a new one, that the walls of the house should
be lime-washed, and that everything should be made
quite straight and proper about the place; but so far,
the master had not kept his word. So it happened
that whenever she fell to lamenting over Benassis’
deeply-rooted carelessness about things, she nearly
always ended solemnly in these words with which all
her praises of her master usually terminated:
“You cannot say that he is a
fool, because he works such miracles, as you may say,
in the place; but, all the same, he is a fool at times,
such a fool that you have to do everything for him
as if he were a child.”
Jacquotte loved the house as if it
had belonged to her; and when she had lived in it
for twenty-two years, had she not some grounds for
deluding herself on that head? After the cure’s
death the house had been for sale; and Benassis, who
had only just come into the country, had bought it
as it stood, with the walls about it and the ground
belonging to it, together with the plate, wine, and
furniture, the old sundial, the poultry, the horse,
and the woman-servant. Jacquotte was the very
pattern of a working housekeeper, with her clumsy figure,
and her bodice, always of the same dark brown print
with large red spots on it, which fitted her so tightly
that it looked as if the material must give way if
she moved at all. Her colorless face, with its
double chin, looked out from under a round plaited
cap, which made her look paler than she really was.
She talked incessantly, and always in a loud voice—this
short, active woman, with the plump, busy hands.
Indeed, if Jacquotte was silent for a moment, and took
a corner of her apron so as to turn it up in a triangle,
it meant that a lengthy expostulation was about to
be delivered for the benefit of master or man.
Jacquotte was beyond all doubt the happiest cook in
the kingdom; for, that nothing might be lacking in
a measure of felicity as great as may be known in
this world below, her vanity was continually gratified—the
townspeople regarded her as an authority of an indefinite
kind, and ranked her somewhere between the mayor and
the park-keeper.
The master of the house found nobody
in the kitchen when he entered it.
“Where the devil are they all
gone?” he asked. “Pardon me for bringing
you in this way,” he went on, turning to Genestas.
“The front entrance opens into the garden, but
I am so little accustomed to receive visitors that—Jacquotte!”
he called in rather peremptory tones.
A woman’s voice answered to
the name from the interior of the house. A moment
later Jacquotte, assuming the offensive, called in
her turn to Benassis, who forthwith went into the
dining-room.
“Just like you, sir!”
she exclaimed; “you never do like anybody else.
You always ask people to dinner without telling me
beforehand, and you think that everything is settled
as soon as you have called for Jacquotte! You
are not going to have the gentleman sit in the kitchen,
are you? Is not the salon to be unlocked and a
fire to be lighted? Nicolle is there, and will
see after everything. Now take the gentleman
into the garden for a minute; that will amuse him;
if he likes to look at pretty things, show him the
arbor of hornbeam trees that the poor dear old gentleman
made. I shall have time then to lay the cloth,
and to get everything ready, the dinner and the salon
too.”
“Yes. But, Jacquotte,”
Benassis went on, “the gentleman is going to
stay with us. Do not forget to give a look round
M. Gravier’s room, and see about the sheets
and things, and——”
“Now you are not going to interfere
about the sheets, are you?” asked Jacquotte.
“If he is to sleep here, I know what must be
done for him perfectly well. You have not so
much as set foot in M. Gravier’s room these
ten months past. There is nothing to see there,
the place is as clean as a new pin. Then will
the gentleman make some stay here?” she continued
in a milder tone.
“Yes.”
“How long will he stay?”
“Faith, I do not know: What does it matter
to you?”
“What does it matter to me,
sir? Oh! very well, what does it matter to me?
Did any one ever hear the like! And the provisions
and all that and——”
At any other time she would have overwhelmed
her master with reproaches for his breach of trust,
but now she followed him into the kitchen before the
torrent of words had come to an end. She had
guessed that there was a prospect of a boarder, and
was eager to see Genestas, to whom she made a very
deferential courtesy, while she scanned him from head
to foot. A thoughtful and dejected expression
gave a harsh look to the soldier’s face.
In the dialogue between master and servant the latter
had appeared to him in the light of a nonentity; and
although he regretted the fact, this revelation had
lessened the high opinion that he had formed of the
man whose persistent efforts to save the district
from the horrors of cretinism had won his admiration.
“I do not like the looks of
that fellow at all!” said Jacquotte to herself.
“If you are not tired, sir,”
said the doctor to his supposed patient, “we
will take a turn round the garden before dinner.”
“Willingly,” answered the commandant.
They went through the dining-room,
and reached the garden by way of a sort of vestibule
at the foot of the staircase between the salon and
the dining-room. Beyond a great glass door at
the farther end of the vestibule lay a flight of stone
steps which adorned the garden side of the house.
The garden itself was divided into four large squares
of equal size by two paths that intersected each other
in the form of a cross, a box edging along their sides.
At the farther end there was a thick, green alley
of hornbeam trees, which had been the joy and pride
of the late owner. The soldier seated himself
on a worm-eaten bench, and saw neither the trellis-work
nor the espaliers, nor the vegetables of which Jacquotte
took such great care. She followed the traditions
of the epicurean churchman to whom this valuable garden
owed its origin; but Benassis himself regarded it
with sufficient indifference.
The commandant turned their talk from
the trivial matters which had occupied them by saying
to the doctor:
“How comes it, sir, that the
population of the valley has been trebled in ten years?
There were seven hundred souls in it when you came,
and to-day you say that they number more than two
thousand.”
“You are the first person who
has put that question to me,” the doctor answered.
“Though it has been my aim to develop the capabilities
of this little corner of the earth to the utmost,
the constant pressure of a busy life has not left
me time to think over the way in which (like the mendicant
brother) I have made ‘broth from a flint’
on a large scale. M. Gravier himself, who is
one of several who have done a great deal for us,
and to whom I was able to render a service by re-establishing
his health, has never given a thought to the theory,
though he has been everywhere over our mountain sides
with me, to see its practical results.”
There was a moment’s silence,
during which Benassis followed his own thoughts, careless
of the keen glance by which his guest friend tried
to fathom him.
“You ask how it came about,
my dear sir?” the doctor resumed. “It
came about quite naturally through the working of
the social law by which the need and the means of
supplying it are correlated. Herein lies the
whole story. Races who have no wants are always
poor. When I first came to live here in this
township, there were about a hundred and thirty peasant
families in it, and some two hundred hearths in the
valley. The local authorities were such as might
be expected in the prevailing wretchedness of the
population. The mayor himself could not write,
and the deputy-mayor was a small farmer, who lived
beyond the limits of the Commune. The justice
of the peace was a poor devil who had nothing but
his salary, and who was forced to relinquish the registration
of births, marriages, and deaths to his clerk, another
hapless wretch who was scarcely able to understand
his duties. The old cure had died at the age
of seventy, and his curate, a quite uneducated man,
had just succeeded to his position. These people
comprised all the intelligence of the district over
which they ruled.
“Those who dwelt amidst these
lovely natural surroundings groveled in squalor and
lived upon potatoes, milk, butter, and cheese.
The only produce that brought in any money was the
cheese, which most of them carried in small baskets
to Grenoble or its outskirts. The richer or the
more energetic among them sowed buckwheat for home
consumption; sometimes they raised a crop of barley
or oats, but wheat was unknown. The only trader
in the place was the mayor, who owned a sawmill and
bought up timber at a low price to sell again.
In the absence of roads, his tree trunks had to be
transported during the summer season; each log was
dragged along one at a time, and with no small difficulty,
by means of a chain attached to a halter about his
horse’s neck, and an iron hook at the farther
end of the chain, which was driven into the wood.
Any one who went to Grenoble, whether on horseback
or afoot, was obliged to follow a track high up on
the mountain side, for the valley was quite impassable.
The pretty road between this place and the first village
that you reach as you come into the canton (the way
along which you must have come) was nothing but a
slough at all seasons of the year.
“Political events and revolutions
had never reached this inaccessible country—it
lay completely beyond the limits of social stir and
change. Napoleon’s name, and his alone,
had penetrated hither; he is held in great veneration,
thanks to one or two old soldiers who have returned
to their native homes, and who of evenings tell marvelous
tales about his adventures and his armies for the benefit
of these simple folk. Their coming back is, moreover,
a puzzle that no one can explain. Before I came
here, the young men who went into the army all stayed
in it for good. This fact in itself is a sufficient
revelation of the wretched condition of the country.
I need not give you a detailed description of it.
“This, then, was the state of
things when I first came to the canton, which has
several contented, well-tilled, and fairly prosperous
communes belonging to it upon the other side of the
mountains. I will say nothing about the hovels
in the town; they were neither more nor less than
stables, in which men and animals were indiscriminately
huddled together. As there was no inn in the place,
I was obliged to ask the curate for a bed, he being
in possession, for the time being, of this house,
then offered for sale. Putting to him question
after question, I came to have some slight knowledge
of the lamentable condition of the country with the
pleasant climate, the fertile soil, and the natural
productiveness that had impressed me so much.
“At that time, sir, I was seeking
to shape a future for myself that should be as little
as possible like the troubled life that had left me
weary; and one of those thoughts came into my mind
that God gives us at times, to enable us to take up
our burdens and bear them. I resolved to develop
all the resources of this country, just as a tutor
develops the capacities of a child. Do not think
too much of my benevolence; the pressing need that
I felt for turning my thoughts into fresh channels
entered too much into my motives. I had determined
to give up the remainder of my life to some difficult
task. A lifetime would be required to bring about
the needful changes in a canton that Nature had made
so wealthy, and man so poor; and I was tempted by the
practical difficulties that stood in the way.
As soon as I found that I could secure the cure’s
house and plenty of waste land at a small cost, I
solemnly devoted myself to the calling of a country
surgeon —the very last position that a
man aspires to take. I determined to become the
friend of the poor, and to expect no reward of any
kind from them. Oh! I did not indulge in
any illusions as to the nature of the country people,
nor as to the hindrances that lie in the way of every
attempt to bring about a better state of things among
men or their surroundings. I have never made
idyllic pictures of my people; I have taken them at
their just worth—as poor peasants, neither
wholly good nor wholly bad, whose constant toil never
allows them to indulge in emotion, though they can
feel acutely at times. Above all things, in fact,
I clearly understood that I should do nothing with
them except through an appeal to their selfish interests,
and by schemes for their immediate well-being.
The peasants are one and all the sons of St. Thomas,
the doubting apostle—they always like words
to be supported by visible facts.
“Perhaps you will laugh at my
first start, sir,” the doctor went on after
a pause. “I began my difficult enterprise
by introducing the manufacture of baskets. The
poor folks used to buy the wicker mats on which they
drain their cheeses, and all the baskets needed for
the insignificant trade of the district. I suggested
to an intelligent young fellow that he might take
a lease on a good-sized piece of land by the side
of the torrent. Every year the floods deposited
a rich alluvial soil on this spot, where there should
be no difficulty in growing osiers. I reckoned
out the quantity of wicker-work of various kinds required
from time to time by the canton, and went over to
Grenoble, where I found a young craftsman, a clever
worker, but without any capital. When I had discovered
him, I soon made up my mind to set him up in business
here. I undertook to advance the money for the
osiers required for his work until my osier-farmer
should be in a position to supply him. I induced
him to sell his baskets at rather lower prices than
they asked for them in Grenoble, while, at the same
time, they were better made. He entered into my
views completely. The osier-beds and the basket-making
were two business speculations whose results were
only appreciated after a lapse of four years.
Of course, you know that osiers must be three years
old before they are fit to cut.
“At the commencement of operations,
the basket-maker was boarded and lodged gratuitously.
Before very long he married a woman from Saint Laurent
du Pont, who had a little money. Then he had a
house built, in a healthy and very airy situation
which I chose, and my advice was followed as to the
internal arrangements. Here was a triumph!
I had created a new industry, and had brought a producer
and several workers into the town. I wonder if
you will regard my elations as childish?
“For the first few days after
my basket-maker had set up his business, I never went
past his shop but my heart beat somewhat faster.
And when I saw the newly-built house, with the green-painted
shutters, the vine beside the doorway, and the bench
and bundles of osiers before it; when I saw a tidy,
neatly-dressed woman within it, nursing a plump, pink
and white baby among the workmen, who were singing
merrily and busily plaiting their wicker-work under
the superintendence of a man who but lately had looked
so pinched and pale, but now had an atmosphere of
prosperity about him; when I saw all this, I confess
that I could not forego the pleasure of turning basket-maker
for a moment, of going into the shop to hear how things
went with them, and of giving myself up to a feeling
of content that I cannot express in words, for I had
all their happiness as well as my own to make me glad.
All my hopes became centered on this house, where the
man dwelt who had been the first to put a steady faith
in me. Like the basket-maker’s wife, clasping
her first nursling to her breast, did not I already
fondly cherish the hopes of the future of this poor
district?
“I had to do so many things
at once,” he went on, “I came into collision
with other people’s notions, and met with violent
opposition, fomented by the ignorant mayor to whose
office I had succeeded, and whose influence had dwindled
away as mine increased. I determined to make
him my deputy and a confederate in my schemes of benevolence.
Yes, in the first place, I endeavored to instil enlightened
ideas into the densest of all heads. Through his
self-love and cupidity I gained a hold upon my man.
During six months as we dined together, I took him
deeply into my confidence about my projected improvements.
Many people would think this intimacy one of the most
painful inflictions in the course of my task; but was
he not a tool of the most valuable kind? Woe
to him who despises his axe, or flings it carelessly
aside! Would it not have been very inconsistent,
moreover, if I, who wished to improve a district, had
shrunk back at the thought of improving one man in
it?
“A road was our first and most
pressing need in bringing about a better state of
things. If we could obtain permission from the
Municipal Council to make a hard road, so as to put
us in communication with the highway to Grenoble,
the deputy-mayor would be the first gainer by it;
for instead of dragging his timber over rough tracks
at a great expense, a good road through the canton
would enable him to transport it more easily, and
to engage in a traffic on a large scale, in all kinds
of wood, that would bring in money—not a
miserable six hundred francs a year, but handsome sums
which would mean a certain fortune for him some day.
Convinced at last, he became my proselytizer.
“Through the whole of one winter
the ex-mayor got into the way of explaining to our
citizens that a good road for wheeled traffic would
be a source of wealth to the whole country round, for
it would enable every one to do a trade with Grenoble;
he held forth on this head at the tavern while drinking
with his intimates. When the Municipal Council
had authorized the making of the road, I went to the
prefect and obtained some money from the charitable
funds at the disposal of the department, in order
to pay for the hire of carts, for the Commune was
unable to undertake the transport of road metal for
lack of wheeled conveyances. The ignorant began
to murmur against me, and to say that I wanted to
bring the days of the corvee back again; this made
me anxious to finish this important work, that they
might speedily appreciate its benefits. With
this end in view, every Sunday during my first year
of office I drew the whole population of the township,
willing or unwilling, up on to the mountain, where
I myself had traced out on a hard bottom the road
between our village and the highway to Grenoble.
Materials for making it were fortunately to be had
in plenty along the site.
“The tedious enterprise called
for a great deal of patience on my part. Some
who were ignorant of the law would refuse at times
to give their contribution of labor; others again,
who had not bread to eat, really could not afford
to lose a day. Corn had to be distributed among
these last, and the others must be soothed with friendly
words. Yet by the time we had finished two-thirds
of the road, which in all is about two leagues in
length, the people had so thoroughly recognized its
advantages that the remaining third was accomplished
with a spirit that surprised me. I added to the
future wealth of the Commune by planting a double
row of poplars along the ditch on either side of the
way. The trees are already almost worth a fortune,
and they make our road look like a king’s highway.
It is almost always dry, by reason of its position,
and it was so well made that the annual cost of maintaining
it is a bare two hundred francs. I must show
it to you, for you cannot have seen it; you must have
come by the picturesque way along the valley bottom,
a road which the people decided to make for themselves
three years later, so as to connect the various farms
that were made there at that time. In three years
ideas had rooted themselves in the common sense of
this township, hitherto so lacking in intelligence
that a passing traveler would perhaps have thought
it hopeless to attempt to instil them. But to
continue.
“The establishment of the basket-maker
was an example set before these poverty-stricken folk
that they might profit by it. And if the road
was to be a direct cause of the future wealth of the
canton, all the primary forms of industry must be
stimulated, or these two germs of a better state of
things would come to nothing. My own work went
forward by slow degrees, as I helped my osier farmer
and wicker-worker and saw to the making of the road.
“I had two horses, and the timber
merchant, the deputy-mayor, had three. He could
only have them shod whenever he went over to Grenoble,
so I induced a farrier to take up his abode here, and
undertook to find him plenty of work. On the
same day I met with a discharged soldier, who had
nothing but his pension of a hundred francs, and was
sufficiently perplexed about his future. He could
read and write, so I engaged him as secretary to the
mayor; as it happened, I was lucky enough to find
a wife for him, and his dreams of happiness were fulfilled.
“Both of these new families
needed houses, as well as the basket-maker and twenty-two
others from the cretin village, soon afterwards twelve
more households were established in the place.
The workers in each of these families were at once
producers and consumers. They were masons, carpenters,
joiners, slaters, blacksmiths, and glaziers; and there
was work enough to last them for a long time, for
had they not their own houses to build when they had
finished those for other people? Seventy, in
fact, were build in the Commune during my second year
of office. One form of production demands another.
The additions to the population of the township had
created fresh wants, hitherto unknown among these
dwellers in poverty. The wants gave rise to industries,
and industries to trade, and the gains of trade raised
the standard of comfort, which in its turn gave them
practical ideas.
“The various workmen wished
to buy their bread ready baked, so we came to have
a baker. Buckwheat could no longer be the food
of a population which, awakened from its lethargy,
had become essentially active. They lived on
buckwheat when I first came among them, and I wished
to effect a change to rye, or a mixture of rye and
wheat in the first instance, and finally to see a
loaf of white bread even in the poorest household.
Intellectual progress, to my thinking, was entirely
dependent on a general improvement in the conditions
of life. The presence of a butcher in the district
says as much for its intelligence as for its wealth.
The worker feeds himself, and a man who feeds himself
thinks. I had made a very careful study of the
soil, for I foresaw a time when it would be necessary
to grow wheat. I was sure of launching the place
in a very prosperous agricultural career, and of doubling
the population, when once it had begun to work.
And now the time had come.
“M. Gravier, of Grenoble,
owned a great deal of land in the commune, which brought
him in no rent, but which might be turned into corn-growing
land. He is the head of a department in the Prefecture,
as you know. It was a kindness for his own countryside
quite as much as my earnest entreaties that won him
over. He had very benevolently yielded to my
importunities on former occasions, and I succeeded
in making it clear to him that in so doing he had
wrought unconsciously for his own benefit. After
several days spent in pleadings, consultation, and
talk, the matter was thrashed out. I undertook
to guarantee him against all risks in the undertaking,
from which his wife, a woman of no imagination, sought
to frighten him. He agreed to build four farmhouses
with a hundred acres of land attached to each, and
promised to advance the sums required to pay for clearing
the ground, for seeds, ploughing gear, and cattle,
and for making occupation roads.
“I myself also started two farms,
quite as much for the sake of bringing my waste land
into cultivation as with a view to giving an object-lesson
in the use of modern methods in agriculture. In
six weeks’ time the population of the town increased
to three hundred people. Homes for several families
must be built on the six farms; there was a vast quantity
of land to be broken up; the work called for laborers.
Wheelwrights, drainmakers, journeymen, and laborers
of all kinds flocked in. The road to Grenoble
was covered with carts that came and went. All
the countryside was astir. The circulation of
money had made every one anxious to earn it, apathy
had ceased, the place had awakened.
“The story of M. Gravier, one
of those who did so much for this canton, can be concluded
in a few words. In spite of cautious misgivings,
not unnatural in a man occupying an official position
in a provincial town, he advanced more than forty
thousand francs, on the faith of my promises, without
knowing whether he should ever see them back again.
To-day every one of his farms is let for a thousand
francs. His tenants have thriven so well that
each of them owns at least a hundred acres, three
hundred sheep, twenty cows, ten oxen, and five horses,
and employs more than twenty persons.
“But to resume. Our farms
were ready by the end of the fourth year. Our
wheat harvest seemed miraculous to the people in the
district, heavy as the first crop off the land ought
to be. How often during that year I trembled
for the success of my work! Rain or drought might
spoil everything by diminishing the belief in me that
was already felt. When we began to grow wheat,
it necessitated the mill that you have seen, which
brings me in about five hundred francs a year.
So the peasants say that ‘there is luck about
me’ (that is the way they put it), and believe
in me as they believe in their relics. These new
undertakings—the farms, the mill, the plantations,
and the roads —have given employment to
all the various kinds of workers whom I had called
in. Although the buildings fully represent the
value of the sixty thousand francs of capital, which
we sunk in the district, the outlay was more than
returned to us by the profits on the sales which the
consumers occasioned. I never ceased my efforts
to put vigor into this industrial life which was just
beginning. A nurseryman took my advice and came
to settle in the place, and I preached wholesome doctrine
to the poor concerning the planting of fruit trees,
in order that some day they should obtain a monopoly
of the sale of fruit in Grenoble.
“‘You take your cheeses
there as it is,’ I used to tell them, ’why
not take poultry, eggs, vegetables, game, hay and straw,
and so forth?’ All my counsels were a source
of fortune; it was a question of who should follow
them first. A number of little businesses were
started; they went on at first but slowly, but from
day to day their progress became more rapid; and now
sixty carts full of the various products of the district
set out every Monday for Grenoble, and there is more
buckwheat grown for poultry food than they used to
sow for human consumption. The trade in timber
grew to be so considerable that it was subdivided,
and since the fourth year of our industrial era, we
have had dealers in firewood, squared timber, planks,
bark, and later on, in charcoal. In the end four
new sawmills were set up, to turn out the planks and
beams of timber.
“When the ex-mayor had acquired
a few business notions, he felt the necessity of learning
to read and write. He compared the prices that
were asked for wood in various neighborhoods, and found
such differences in his favor, that he secured new
customers in one place after another, and now a third
of the trade in the department passes through his
hands. There has been such a sudden increase in
our traffic that we find constant work for three wagon-builders
and two harness-makers, each of them employing three
hands at least. Lastly, the quantity of ironware
that we use is so large that an agricultural implement
and tool-maker has removed into the town, and is very
well satisfied with the result.
“The desire of gain develops
a spirit of ambition, which has ever since impelled
our workers to extend their field from the township
to the canton, and from the canton to the department,
so as to increase their profits by increasing their
sales. I had only to say a word to point out
new openings to them, and their own sense did the rest.
Four years had been sufficient to change the face
of the township. When I had come through it first,
I did not catch the slightest sound; but in less than
five years from that time, there was life and bustle
everywhere. The gay songs, the shrill or murmuring
sounds made by the tools in the workshops rang pleasantly
in my ears. I watched the comings and goings
of a busy population congregated in the clean and
wholesome new town, where plenty of trees had been
planted. Every one of them seemed conscious of
a happy lot, every face shone with the content that
comes through a life of useful toil.
“I look upon these five years
as the first epoch of prosperity in the history of
our town,” the doctor went on after a pause.
“During that time I have prepared the ground
and sowed the seed in men’s minds as well as
in the land. Henceforward industrial progress
could not be stayed, the population was bound to go
forward. A second epoch was about to begin.
This little world very soon desired to be better clad.
A shoemaker came, and with him a haberdasher, a tailor,
and a hatter. This dawn of luxury brought us
a butcher and a grocer, and a midwife, who became
very necessary to me, for I lost a great deal of time
over maternity cases. The stubbed wastes yielded
excellent harvests, and the superior quality of our
agricultural produce was maintained through the increased
supply of manure. My enterprise could now develop
itself; everything followed on quite naturally.
“When the houses had been rendered
wholesome, and their inmates gradually persuaded to
feed and clothe themselves better, I wanted the dumb
animals to feel the benefit of these beginnings of
civilization. All the excellence of cattle, whether
as a race or as individuals, and, in consequence,
the quality of the milk and meat, depends upon the
care that is expended upon them. I took the sanitation
of cowsheds for the text of my sermons. I showed
them how an animal that is properly housed and well
cared for is more profitable than a lean neglected
beast, and the comparison wrought a gradual change
for the better in the lot of the cattle in the Commune.
Not one of them was ill treated. The cows and
oxen were rubbed down as in Switzerland and Auvergne.
Sheep-folds, stables, byres, dairies, and barns were
rebuilt after the pattern of the roomy, well-ventilated,
and consequently healthy steadings that M. Gravier
and I had constructed. Our tenants became my
apostles. They made rapid converts of unbelievers,
demonstrating the soundness of my doctrines by their
prompt results. I lent money to those who needed
it, giving the preference to hardworking poor people,
because they served as an example. Any unsound
or sickly cattle or beasts of poor quality were quickly
disposed of by my advice, and replaced by fine specimens.
In this way our dairy produce came, in time, to command
higher prices in the market than that sent by other
communes. We had splendid herds, and as a consequence,
capital leather.
“This step forward was of great
importance, and in this wise. In rural economy
nothing can be regarded as trifling. Our hides
used to fetch scarcely anything, and the leather we
made was of little value, but when once our leather
and hides were improved, tanneries were easily established
along the waterside. We became tanners, and business
rapidly increased.
“Wine, properly speaking, had
been hitherto unknown; a thin, sour beverage like
verjuice had been their only drink, but now wineshops
were established to supply a natural demand. The
oldest tavern was enlarged and transformed into an
inn, which furnished mules to pilgrims to the Grand
Chartreuse who began to come our way, and after two
years there was just enough business for two innkeepers.
“The justice of the peace died
just as our second prosperous epoch began, and luckily
for us, his successor had formerly been a notary in
Grenoble who had lost most of his fortune by a bad
speculation, though enough of it yet remained to cause
him to be looked upon in the village as a wealthy
man. It was M. Gravier who induced him to settle
among us. He built himself a comfortable house
and helped me by uniting his efforts to mine.
He also laid out a farm, and broke up and cleaned
some of the waste land, and at this moment he has three
chalets up above on the mountain side. He has
a large family. He dismissed the old registrar
and the clerk, and in their place installed better-educated
men, who worked far harder, moreover, than their predecessors
had done. One of the heads of these two new households
started a distillery of potato-spirit, and the other
was a wool-washer; each combined these occupations
with his official work, and in this way two valuable
industries were created among us.
“Now that the Commune had some
revenues of its own, no opposition was raised in any
quarter when they were spent on building a town-hall,
with a free school for elementary education in the
building and accommodation for a teacher. For
this important post I had selected a poor priest who
had taken the oath, and had therefore been cast out
by the department, and who at last found a refuge
among us for his old age. The schoolmistress
is a very worthy woman who had lost all that she had,
and was in great distress. We made up a nice little
sum for her, and she has just opened a boarding-school
for girls to which the wealthy farmers hereabouts
are beginning to send their daughters.
“If so far, sir, I have been
entitled to tell you the story of my own doings as
the chronicle of this little spot of earth, I have
reached the point where M. Janvier, the new parson,
began to divide the work of regeneration with me.
He has been a second Fenelon, unknown beyond the narrow
limits of a country parish, and by some secret of his
own has infused a spirit of brotherliness and of charity
among these folk that has made them almost like one
large family. M. Dufau, the justice of the peace,
was a late comer, but he in an equal degree deserves
the gratitude of the people here.
“I will put the whole position
before you in figures that will make it clearer than
any words of mine. At this moment the Commune
owns two hundred acres of woodland, and a hundred
and sixty acres of meadow. Without running up
the rates, we give a hundred crowns to supplement
the cure’s stipend, we pay two hundred francs
to the rural policeman, and as much again to the schoolmaster
and schoolmistress. The maintenance of the roads
costs us five hundred francs, while necessary repairs
to the townhall, the parsonage, and the church, with
some few other expenses, also amount to a similar
sum. In fifteen years’ time there will
be a thousand francs worth of wood to fell for every
hundred francs’ worth cut now, and the taxes
will not cost the inhabitants a penny. This Commune
is bound to become one of the richest in France.
But perhaps I am taxing your patience, sir?”
said Benassis, suddenly discovering that his companion
wore such a pensive expression that it seemed as though
his attention was wandering.
“No! no!” answered the commandant.
“Our trade, handicrafts, and
agriculture so far only supplied the needs of the
district,” the doctor went on. “At
a certain point our prosperity came to a standstill.
I wanted a post-office, and sellers of tobacco, stationery,
powder and shot. The receiver of taxes had hitherto
preferred to live elsewhere, but now I succeeded in
persuading him to take up his abode in the town, holding
out as inducements the pleasantness of the place and
of the new society. As time and place permitted
I had succeeded in producing a supply of everything
for which I had first created a need, in attracting
families of hardworking people into the district, and
in implanting a desire to own land in them all.
So by degrees, as they saved a little money, the waste
land began to be broken up; spade husbandry and small
holdings increased; so did the value of property on
the mountain.
“Those struggling folk who,
when I knew them first, used to walk over to Grenoble
carrying their few cheeses for sale, now made the journey
comfortably in a cart, and took fruit, eggs, chickens
and turkeys, and before they were aware of it, everyone
was a little richer. Even those who came off
worst had a garden at any rate, and grew early vegetables
and fruit. It became the children’s work
to watch the cattle in the fields, and at last it
was found to be a waste of time to bake bread at home.
Here were signs of prosperity!
“But if this place was to be
a permanent forge of industry, fuel must be constantly
added to the fire. The town had not as yet a renascent
industry which could maintain this commercial process,
an industry which should make great transactions,
a warehouse, and a market necessary. It is not
enough that a country should lose none of the money
that forms its capital; you will not increase its prosperity
by more or less ingenious devices for causing this
amount to circulate, by means of production and consumption,
through the greatest possible number of hands.
That is not where your problem lies. When a country
is fully developed and its production keeps pace with
its consumption, if private wealth is to increase
as well as the wealth of the community at large, there
must be exchanges with other communities, which will
keep a balance on the right side of the balance-sheet.
This thought has let states with a limited territorial
basis like Tyre, Carthage, Venice, Holland, and England,
for instance, to secure the carrying trade. I
cast about for some such notion as this to apply to
our little world, so as to inaugurate a third commercial
epoch. Our town is so much like any other, that
our prosperity was scarcely visible to a passing stranger;
it was only for me that it was astonishing. The
folk had come together by degrees; they themselves
were a part of the change, and could not judge of its
effects as a whole.
“Seven years had gone by when
I met with two strangers, the real benefactors of
the place, which perhaps some day they will transform
into a large town. One of them is a Tyrolese,
an exceedingly clever fellow, who makes rough shoes
for country people’s wear, and boots for people
of fashion in Grenoble as no one can make them, not
even in Paris itself. He was a poor strolling
musician, who, singing and working, had made his way
through Italy; one of those busy Germans who fashion
the tools of their own work, and make the instrument
that they play upon. When he came to the town
he asked if any one wanted a pair of shoes. They
sent him to me, and I gave him an order for two pairs
of boots, for which he made his own lasts. The
foreigner’s skill surprised me. He gave
accurate and consistent answers to the questions I
put, and his face and manner confirmed the good opinion
I had formed of him. I suggested that he should
settle in the place, undertaking to assist him in
business in every way that I could; in fact, I put
a fairly large sum of money at his disposal.
He accepted my offer. I had my own ideas in this.
The quality of our leather had improved; and why should
we not use it ourselves, and before very long make
our own shoes at moderate prices?
“It was the basket-maker’s
business over again on a larger scale. Chance
had put an exceedingly clever hard-working man in my
way, and he must be retained so that a steady and
profitable trade might be given to the place.
There is a constant demand for foot-gear, and a very
slight difference in price is felt at once by the purchaser.
“This was my reasoning, sir,
and fortunately events have justified it. At
this time we have five tanyards, each of which has
its bark-mill. They take all the hides produced
in the department itself, and even draw part of their
supply from Provence; and yet the Tyrolese uses more
leather than they can produce, and has forty work-people
in his employ!
“I happened on the other man
after a fashion no whit less strange, but you might
find the story tedious. He is just an ordinary
peasant, who discovered a cheaper way of making the
great broad-brimmed hats that are worn in this part
of the world. He sells them in other cantons,
and even sends them into Switzerland and Savoy.
So long as the quality and the low prices can be maintained,
here are two inexhaustible sources of wealth for the
canton, which suggested to my mind the idea of establishing
three fairs in the year. The prefect, amazed at
our industrial progress, lent his aid in obtaining
the royal ordinance which authorized them, and last
year we held our three fairs. They are known
as far as Savoy as the Shoe Fair and the Hat Fair.
“The head clerk of a notary
in Grenoble heard of these changes. He was poor,
but he was a well-educated, hardworking young fellow,
and Mlle. Gravier was engaged to be married to
him. He went to Paris to ask for an authorization
to establish himself here as a notary, and his request
was granted. As he had not to pay for his appointment,
he could afford to build a house in the market square
of the new town, opposite the house of the justice
of the peace. We have a market once a week, and
a considerable amount of business is transacted in
corn and cattle.
“Next year a druggist surely
ought to come among us, and next we want a clockmaker,
a furniture dealer, and a bookseller; and so, by degrees,
we shall have all the desirable luxuries of life.
Who knows but that at last we shall have a number
of substantial houses, and give ourselves all the
airs of a small city? Education has made such
strides that there has never been any opposition made
at the council-board when I proposed that we should
restore our church and build a parsonage; nor when
I brought forward a plan for laying out a fine open
space, planted with trees, where the fairs could be
held, and a further scheme for a survey of the township,
so that its future streets should be wholesome, spacious,
and wisely planned.
“This is how we came to have
nineteen hundred hearths in the place of a hundred
and thirty-seven; three thousand head of cattle instead
of eight hundred; and for a population of seven hundred,
no less than two thousand persons are living in the
township, or three thousand, if the people down the
valley are included. There are twelve houses belonging
to wealthy people in the Commune, there are a hundred
well-to-do families, and two hundred more which are
thriving. The rest have their own exertions to
look to. Every one knows how to read and write,
and we subscribe to seventeen different newspapers.
“We have poor people still among
us—there are far too many of them, in fact;
but we have no beggars, and there is work enough for
all. I have so many patients that my daily round
taxes the powers of two horses. I can go anywhere
for five miles round at any hour without fear; for
if any one was minded to fire a shot at me, his life
would not be worth ten minutes’ purchase.
The undemonstrative affection of the people is my
sole gain from all these changes, except the radiant
‘Good-day, M. Benassis,’ that every one
gives me as I pass. You will understand, of course,
that the wealth incidentally acquired through my model
farms has only been a means and not an end.”
“If every one followed your
example in other places, sir, France would be great
indeed, and might laugh at the rest of Europe!”
cried Genestas enthusiastically.
“But I have kept you out here
for half an hour,” said Benassis; “it is
growing dark, let us go in to dinner.”
The doctor’s house, on the side
facing the garden, consists of a ground floor and
a single story, with a row of five windows in each,
dormer windows also project from the tiled mansard-roof.
The green-painted shutters are in startling contrast
with the gray tones of the walls. A vine wanders
along the whole side of the house, a pleasant strip
of green like a frieze, between the two stories.
A few struggling Bengal roses make shift to live as
best they may, half drowned at times by the drippings
from the gutterless eaves.
As you enter the large vestibule,
the salon lies to your right; it contains four windows,
two of which look into the yard, and two into the
garden. Ceiling and wainscot are paneled, and
the walls are hung with seventeenth century tapestry—pathetic
evidence that the room had been the object of the
late owner’s aspiration, and that he had lavished
all that he could spare upon it. The great roomy
armchairs, covered with brocaded damask; the old fashioned,
gilded candle-sconces above the chimney-piece, and
the window curtains with their heavy tassels, showed
that the cure had been a wealthy man. Benassis
had made some additions to this furniture, which was
not without a character of its own. He had placed
two smaller tables, decorated with carved wooden garlands,
between the windows on opposite sides of the room,
and had put a clock, in a case of tortoise shell, inlaid
with copper, upon the mantel-shelf. The doctor
seldom occupied the salon; its atmosphere was damp
and close, like that of a room that is always kept
shut. Memories of the dead cure still lingered
about it; the peculiar scent of his tobacco seemed
to pervade the corner by the hearth where he had been
wont to sit. The two great easy-chairs were symmetrically
arranged on either side of the fire, which had not
been lighted since the time of M. Gravier’s
visit; the bright flames from the pine logs lighted
the room.
“The evenings are chilly even
now,” said Benassis; “it is pleasant to
see a fire.”
Genestas was meditating. He was
beginning to understand the doctor’s indifference
to his every-day surroundings.
“It is surprising to me, sir,
that you, who possess real public spirit, should have
made no effort to enlighten the Government, after
accomplishing so much.”
Benassis began to laugh, but without
bitterness; he said, rather sadly:
“You mean that I should draw
up some sort of memorial on various ways of civilizing
France? You are not the first to suggest it, sir;
M. Gravier has forestalled you. Unluckily, Governments
cannot be enlightened, and a Government which regards
itself as a diffuser of light is the least open to
enlightenment. What we have done for our canton,
every mayor ought, of course, to do for his; the magistrate
should work for his town, the sub-prefect for his district,
the prefect for the department, and the minister for
France, each acting in his own sphere of interest.
For the few miles of country road that I persuaded
our people to make, another would succeed in constructing
a canal or a highway; and for my encouragement of the
peasants’ trade in hats, a minister would emancipate
France from the industrial yoke of the foreigner by
encouraging the manufacture of clocks in different
places, by helping to bring to perfection our iron
and steel, our tools and appliances, or by bringing
silk or dyer’s woad into cultivation.
“In commerce, ‘encouragement,’
does not mean protection. A really wise policy
should aim at making a country independent of foreign
supply, but this should be effected without resorting
to the pitiful shifts of customs duties and prohibitions.
Industries must work out their own salvation, competition
is the life of trade. A protected industry goes
to sleep, and monopoly, like the protective tariff,
kills it outright. The country upon which all
others depend for their supplies will be the land
which will promulgate free trade, for it will be conscious
of its power to produce its manufactures at prices
lower than those of any of its competitors. France
is in a better position to attain this end than England,
for France alone possesses an amount of territory
sufficiently extensive to maintain a supply of agricultural
produce at prices that will enable the worker to live
on low wages; the Administration should keep this
end in view, for therein lies the whole modern question.
I have not devoted my life to this study, dear sir;
I found my work by accident, and late in the day.
Such simple things as these are too slight, moreover,
to build into a system; there is nothing wonderful
about them, they do not lend themselves to theories;
it is their misfortune to be merely practically useful.
And then work cannot be done quickly. The man
who means to succeed in these ways must daily look
to find within himself the stock of courage needed
for the day, a courage in reality of the rarest kind,
though it does not seem hard to practise, and meets
with little recognition—the courage of
the schoolmaster, who must say the same things over
and over again. We all honor the man who has
shed his blood on the battlefield, as you have done;
but we ridicule this other whose life-fire is slowly
consumed in repeating the same words to children of
the same age. There is no attraction for any of
us in obscure well-doing. We know nothing of
the civic virtue that led the great men of ancient
times to serve their country in the lowest rank whenever
they did not command. Our age is afflicted with
a disease that makes each of us seek to rise above
his fellows, and there are more saints than shrines
among us.
“This is how it has come to
pass. The monarchy fell, and we lost Honor, Christian
Virtue faded with the religion of our forefathers,
and our own ineffectual attempts at government have
destroyed Patriotism. Ideas can never utterly
perish, so these beliefs linger on in our midst, but
they do not influence the great mass of the people,
and Society has no support but Egoism. Every individual
believes in himself. For us the future means
egoism; further than that we cannot see. The
great man who shall save us from the shipwreck which
is imminent will no doubt avail himself of individualism
when he makes a nation of us once more; but until
this regeneration comes, we bide our time in a materialistic
and utilitarian age. Util