new
credulity knew of no doubt. The ill luck was broken. He spoke
cheerily to his wife. She was also
hopeful. Three priests came to that
christening, and Madame Levaille was
godmother. The child turned out
an idiot too.
Then on market days Jean-Pierre was seen bargaining bitterly,
quarrelsome and
greedy; then getting drunk with taciturn earnestness;
then driving home in the dusk at a rate fit for a
wedding, but with a
face
gloomy enough for a
funeral. Sometimes he would insist on his
wife coming with him; and they would drive in the early morning,
shaking side by side on the narrow seat above the
helpless pig, that,
with tied legs, grunted a
melancholy sigh at every rut. The morning
drives were silent; but in the evening, coming home, Jean-Pierre,
tipsy, was viciously muttering, and growled at the confounded woman
who could not rear children that were like anybody else's. Susan,
holding on against the erratic swayings of the cart, pretended not to
hear. Once, as they were driving through Ploumar, some obscure and
drunkenimpulse caused him to pull up
sharply opposite the church. The
moon swam
amongst light white clouds. The tombstones gleamed pale
under the fretted shadows of the trees in the
churchyard. Even the
village dogs slept. Only the nightingales, awake, spun out the thrill
of their song above the silence of graves. Jean-Pierre said
thickly to
his wife--
"What do you think is there?"
He
pointed his whip at the tower--in which the big dial of the clock
appeared high in the
moonlight like a pallid face without eyes--and
getting out carefully, fell down at once by the wheel. He picked
himself up and climbed one by one the few steps to the iron gate of
the
churchyard. He put his face to the bars and called out
indistinctly--
"Hey there! Come out!"
"Jean! Return! Return!" entreated his wife in low tones.
He took no notice, and seemed to wait there. The song of nightingales
beat on all sides against the high walls of the church, and flowed
back between stone crosses and flat gray slabs, engraved with words of
hope and sorrow.
"Hey! Come out!" shouted Jean-Pierre, loudly.
The nightingales ceased to sing.
"Nobody?" went on Jean-Pierre. "Nobody there. A swindle of the crows.
That's what this is. Nobody
anywhere. I
despise it. Allez! Houp!"
He shook the gate with all his strength, and the iron bars
rattled
with a
frightful clanging, like a chain dragged over stone steps. A
dog near by barked
hurriedly" target="_blank" title="ad.仓促地,忙乱地">
hurriedly. Jean-Pierre staggered back, and after
three
successive dashes got into his cart. Susan sat very quiet and
still. He said to her with
drunken severity--
"See? Nobody. I've been made a fool! Malheur! Somebody will pay for
it. The next one I see near the house I will lay my whip on . . . on
the black spine . . . I will. I don't want him in there . . . he only
helps the carrion crows to rob poor folk. I am a man. . . . We will
see if I can't have children like anybody else . . . now you
mind. . . . They won't be all . . . all . . . we see. . . ."
She burst out through the fingers that hid her face--
"Don't say that, Jean; don't say that, my man!"
He struck her a swinging blow on the head with the back of his hand
and knocked her into the bottom of the cart, where she crouched,
thrown about lamentably by every jolt. He drove
furiously, standing
up, brandishing his whip, shaking the reins over the gray horse that
galloped ponderously, making the heavy
harness leap upon his broad
quarters. The country rang
clamorous in the night with the irritated
barking of farm dogs, that followed the
rattle of wheels all along the
road. A couple of
belated wayfarers had only just time to step into
the ditch. At his own gate he caught the post and was shot out of the
cart head first. The horse went on slowly to the door. At Susan's
piercing cries the farm hands rushed out. She thought him dead, but he
was only
sleeping where he fell, and cursed his men, who hastened to
him, for disturbing his slumbers.
Autumn came. The clouded sky descended low upon the black contours of
the hills; and the dead leaves danced in
spiral whirls under naked
trees, till the wind, sighing
profoundly, laid them to rest in the
hollows of bare valleys. And from morning till night one could see all
over the land black denuded boughs, the boughs gnarled and twisted, as
if contorted with pain, swaying sadly between the wet clouds and the
soaked earth. The clear and gentle streams of summer days rushed
discoloured and raging at the stones that barred the way to the sea,
with the fury of
madness bent upon
suicide. From
horizon to
horizonthe great road to the sands lay between the hills in a dull
glitter of
empty curves, resembling an unnavigable river of mud.
Jean-Pierre went from field to field, moving blurred and tall in the
drizzle, or striding on the crests of rises,
lonely and high upon the
gray curtain of drifting clouds, as if he had been pacing along the
very edge of the
universe. He looked at the black earth, at the
earth mute and
promising, at the
mysterious earth doing its work of
life in death-like
stillness under the veiled sorrow of the sky. And
it seemed to him that to a man worse than childless there was no
promise in the
fertility of fields, that from him the earth escaped,
defied him, frowned at him like the clouds, sombre and
hurried above
his head. Having to face alone his own fields, he felt the inferiority
of man who passes away before the clod that remains. Must he give up
the hope of having by his side a son who would look at the turned-up
sods with a master's eye? A man that would think as he thought, that
would feel as he felt; a man who would be part of himself, and yet
remain to
trample masterfully on that earth when he was gone? He
thought of some distant relations, and felt
savage enough to curse
them aloud. They! Never! He turned
homewards, going straight at the
roof of his
dwelling,
visible between the enlaced skeletons of trees.
As he swung his legs over the stile a cawing flock of birds settled
slowly on the field; dropped down behind his back, noiseless and
fluttering, like flakes of soot.
That day Madame Levaille had gone early in the afternoon to the house
she had near Kervanion. She had to pay some of the men who worked in
her
granitequarry there, and she went in good time because her little
house contained a shop where the
workmen could spend their wages
without the trouble of going to town. The house stood alone
amongstrocks. A lane of mud and stones ended at the door. The sea-winds
coming
ashore on Stonecutter's point, fresh from the
fierceturmoil of
the waves, howled
violently at the
unmoved heaps of black boulders
holding up
steadily short-armed, high crosses against the tremendous
rush of the in
visible. In the sweep of gales the sheltered
dwellingstood in a calm resonant and disquieting, like the calm in the centre
of a
hurricane. On stormy nights, when the tide was out, the bay of
Fougere, fifty feet below the house, resembled an
immense black pit,
from which ascended mutterings and sighs as if the sands down there
had been alive and complaining. At high tide the returning water
assaulted the ledges of rock in short rushes,
ending in bursts of
livid light and columns of spray, that flew
inland, stinging to death
the grass of pastures.
The darkness came from the hills, flowed over the coast, put out the
red fires of
sunset, and went on to
seaward pursuing the retiring
tide. The wind dropped with the sun, leaving a maddened sea and a
devastated sky. The heavens above the house seemed to be draped in
black rags, held up here and there by pins of fire. Madame Levaille,
for this evening the servant of her own
workmen, tried to induce them
to depart. "An old woman like me ought to be in bed at this late
hour," she good-humouredly
repeated. The
quarrymen drank, asked for
more. They shouted over the table as if they had been talking across a
field. At one end four of them played cards, banging the wood with
their hard knuckles, and swearing at every lead. One sat with a lost
gaze, humming a bar of some song, which he
repeated endlessly. Two
others, in a corner, were quarrelling confidentially and
fiercely
over some woman, looking close into one another's eyes as if they had
wanted to tear them out, but
speaking in whispers that promised