That Was The Way They Set To Work In England Before The Puritans Came,
When Men Were Not Afraid To Steal Verses From One Another, And When No
One Imagined That He Could Live By Letters, But When Every Poet Took A
Patron, Or Begged Or Robbed The Churches.
So much for the poets.
Flavigny then, I say (for I seem to be digressing), is a long street
of houses all built together as animals build their communities. They
are all very old, but the people have worked hard since the
Revolution, and none of them are poor, nor are any of them very rich.
I saw but one gentleman's house, and that, I am glad to say, was in
disrepair. Most of the peasants' houses had, for a ground floor,
cavernous great barns out of which came a delightful smell of
morning - that is, of hay, litter, oxen, and stored grains and old
wood; which is the true breath of morning, because it is the scent
that all the human race worth calling human first meets when it rises,
and is the association of sunrise in the minds of those who keep the
world alive: but not in the wretched minds of townsmen, and least of
all in the minds of journalists, who know nothing of morning save that
it is a time of jaded emptiness when you have just done prophesying
(for the hundredth time) the approaching end of the world, when the
floors are beginning to tremble with machinery, and when, in a weary
kind of way, one feels hungry and alone: a nasty life and usually a
short one.
To return to Flavigny. This way of stretching a village all along one
street is Roman, and is the mark of civilization. When I was at
college I was compelled to read a work by the crabbed Tacitus on the
Germans, where, in the midst of a deal that is vague and fantastic
nonsense and much that is wilful lying, comes this excellent truth,
that barbarians build their houses separate, but civilized men
together. So whenever you see a lot of red roofs nestling, as the
phrase goes, in the woods of a hillside in south England, remember
that all that is savagery; but when you see a hundred white-washed
houses in a row along a dead straight road, lift up your hearts, for
you are in civilization again.
But I continue to wander from Flavigny. The first thing I saw as I
came into the street and noted how the level sun stood in a haze
beyond, and how it shadowed and brought out the slight irregularities
of the road, was a cart drawn by a galloping donkey, which came at and
passed me with a prodigious clatter as I dragged myself forward. In
the cart were two nuns, each with a scythe; they were going out
mowing, and were up the first in the village, as Religious always are.
Cheered by this happy omen, but not yet heartened, I next met a very
old man leading out a horse, and asked him if there was anywhere where
I could find coffee and bread at that hour; but he shook his head
mournfully and wished me good-morning in a strong accent, for he was
deaf and probably thought I was begging. So I went on still more
despondent till I came to a really merry man of about middle age who
was going to the fields, singing, with a very large rake over his
shoulder. When I had asked him the same question he stared at me a
little and said of course coffee and bread could be had at the
baker's, and when I asked him how I should know the baker's he was
still more surprised at my ignorance, and said, 'By the smoke coming
from the large chimney.' This I saw rising a short way off on my
right, so I thanked him and went and found there a youth of about
nineteen, who sat at a fine oak table and had coffee, rum, and a loaf
before him. He was waiting for the bread in the oven to be ready; and
meanwhile he was very courteous, poured out coffee and rum for me and
offered me bread.
It is a matter often discussed why bakers are such excellent citizens
and good men. For while it is admitted in every country I was ever in
that cobblers are argumentative and atheists (I except the cobbler
under Plinlimmon, concerning whom would to heaven I had the space to
tell you all here, for he knows the legends of the mountain), while it
is public that barbers are garrulous and servile, that millers are
cheats (we say in Sussex that every honest miller has a large tuft of
hair on the palm of his hand), yet - with every trade in the world
having some bad quality attached to it - bakers alone are exempt, and
every one takes it for granted that they are sterling: indeed, there
are some societies in which, no matter how gloomy and churlish the
conversation may have become, you have but to mention bakers for
voices to brighten suddenly and for a good influence to pervade every
one. I say this is known for a fact, but not usually explained; the
explanation is, that bakers are always up early in the morning and can
watch the dawn, and that in this occupation they live in lonely
contemplation enjoying the early hours.
So it was with this baker of mine in Flavigny, who was a boy. When he
heard that I had served at Toul he was delighted beyond measure; he
told me of a brother of his that had been in the same regiment, and he
assured me that he was himself going into the artillery by special
enlistment, having got his father's leave. You know very little if you
think I missed the opportunity of making the guns seem terrible and
glorious in his eyes.
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