policy of our country.
Now, one word of topography. Issoudun stretches north and south, along
a
hillside which rounds towards the highroad to Chateauroux. At the
foot of the hill, a canal, now called the "Riviere forcee" whose
waters are taken from the Theols, was constructed in former times,
when the town was flourishing, for the use of manufactories or to
flood the moats of the
rampart. The "Riviere forcee" forms an
artificial arm of a natural river, the Tournemine, which unites with
several other streams beyond the
suburb of Rome. These little threads
of
running water and the two rivers
irrigate a tract of wide-spreading
meadow-land, enclosed on all sides by little yellowish or white
terraces dotted with black speckles; for such is the
aspect of the
vineyards of Issoudun during seven months of the year. The
vine-growers cut the plants down
yearly, leaving only an ugly stump,
without support, sheltered by a
barrel. The traveller arriving from
Vierzon, Vatan, or Chateauroux, his eyes weary with
monotonous plains,
is agreeably surprised by the meadows of Issoudun,--the oasis of this
part of Berry, which supplies the inhabitants with vegetables
throughout a region of thirty miles in
circumference. Below the
suburbof Rome, lies a vast tract entirely covered with kitchen-gardens, and
divided into two sections, which bear the name of upper and lower
Baltan. A long avenue of poplars leads from the town across the
meadows to an ancient
convent named Frapesle, whose English gardens,
quite
unique in that arrondissement, have received the
ambitious name
of Tivoli. Loving couples
whisper their vows in its alleys of a
Sunday.
Traces of the ancient
grandeur of Issoudun of course reveal themselves
to the eyes of a careful
observer; and the most
suggestive are the
divisions of the town. The
chateau,
formerly almost a town itself with
its walls and moats, is a
distinct quarter which can only be entered,
even at the present day, through its ancient gateways,--by means of
three bridges thrown across the arms of the two rivers,--and has all
the appearance of an ancient city. The
ramparts show, in places, the
formidable strata of their foundations, on which houses have now
sprung up. Above the
chateau, is the famous tower of Issoudun, once
the
citadel. The
conqueror of the city, which lay around these two
fortified points, had still to gain possession of the tower and the
castle; and possession of the castle did not
insure that of the tower,
or
citadel.
The
suburb of Saint-Paterne, which lies in the shape of a palette
beyond the tower, encroaching on the meadow-lands, is so considerable
that in the very earliest ages it must have been part of the city
itself. This opinion derived, in 1822, a sort of
certainty from the
then
existence of the
charming church of Saint-Paterne, recently
pulled down by the heir of the individual who bought it of the nation.
This church, one of the finest specimens of the Romanesque that France
possessed,
actually perished without a single
drawing being made of
the
portal, which was in perfect
preservation. The only voice raised
to save this
monument of a past art found no echo, either in the town
itself or in the department. Though the castle of Issoudun has the
appearance of an old town, with its narrow streets and its ancient
mansions, the city itself,
properly so called, which was captured and
burned at different epochs,
notably during the Fronde, when it was
laid in ashes, has a modern air. Streets that are
spacious in
comparison with those of other towns, and well-built houses form a
striking
contrast to the
aspect of the
citadel,--a
contrast that has
won for Issoudun, in certain geographies, the epithet of "pretty."
In a town thus constituted, without the least activity, even business
activity, without a taste for art, or for
learnedoccupations, and
where everybody stayed in the little round of his or her own home, it
was likely to happen, and did happen under the Restoration in 1816
when the war was over, that many of the young men of the place had no
career before them, and knew not where to turn for
occupation until
they could marry or
inherit the property of their fathers. Bored in
their own homes, these young fellows found little or no distraction
elsewhere in the city; and as, in the language of that region, "youth
must shed its cuticle" they sowed their wild oats at the expense of
the town itself. It was difficult to carry on such operations in open
day, lest the perpetrators should be recognized; for the cup of their
misdemeanors once filled, they were
liable to be arraigned at their
next peccadillo before the police courts; and they therefore
judiciously selected the night time for the
performance of their
mischievous pranks. Thus it was that among the traces of
divers lost
civilizations, a
vestige of the spirit of drollery that
characterized
the manners of
antiquity burst into a final flame.
The young men amused themselves very much as Charles IX. amused
himself with his courtiers, or Henry V. of England and his companions,
or as in former times young men were wont to amuse themselves in the
provinces. Having once banded together for purposes of
mutual help, to
defend each other and
inventamusing tricks, there
presently developed
among them, through the clash of ideas, that spirit of
maliciousmischief which belongs to the period of youth and may even be observed
among animals. The
confederation, in itself, gave them the mimic
delights of the
mystery of an organized
conspiracy. They called
themselves the "Knights of Idleness." During the day these young
scamps were
youthful saints; they all pretended to
extreme quietness;
and, in fact, they
habitually slept late after the nights on which
they had been playing their
malicious pranks. The "Knights" began with
mere
commonplace tricks, such as unhooking and changing signs, ringing
bells, flinging casks left before one house into the
cellar of the
next with a crash, rousing the occupants of the house by a noise that
seemed to their frightened ears like the
explosion of a mine. In
Issoudun, as in many country towns, the
cellar is entered by an
opening near the door of the house, covered with a
wooden scuttle,
secured by strong iron hinges and a padlock.
In 1816, these modern Bad Boys had not
altogether given up such tricks
as these, perpetrated in the provinces by all young lads and gamins.
But in 1817 the Order of Idleness acquired a Grand Master, and
distinguished itself by
mischief which, up to 1823, spread something
like
terror in Issoudun, or at least kept the artisans and the
bourgeoisie perpetually uneasy.
This leader was a certain Maxence Gilet,
commonly called Max, whose
antecedents, no less than his youth and his vigor, predestined him for
such a part. Maxence Gilet was
supposed by all Issoudun to be the
natural son of the sub-delegate Lousteau, that brother of Madame
Hochon whose gallantries had left memories behind them, and who, as we
have seen, drew down upon himself the
hatred of old Doctor Rouget
about the time of Agathe's birth. But the friendship which bound the
two men together before their quarrel was so close that, to use an
expression of that region and that period, "they
willingly walked the
same road." Some people said that Maxence was as likely to be the son
of the doctor as of the sub-delegate; but in fact he belonged to
neither the one nor the other,--his father being a
charming dragoon
officer in
garrison at Bourges. Nevertheless, as a result of their
enmity, and very
fortunately for the child, Rouget and Lousteau never
ceased to claim his paternity.
Max's mother, the wife of a poor sabot-maker in the Rome
suburb, was
possessed, for the perdition of her soul, of a
surprising beauty, a
Trasteverine beauty, the only property which she transmitted to her
son. Madame Gilet,
pregnant with Maxence in 1788, had long desired
that
blessing, which the town attributed to the gallantries of the two
friends,--probably in the hope of
setting them against each other.
Gilet, an old
drunkard with a
triplethroat, treated his wife's
misconduct with a collusion that is not
uncommon among the lower
classes. To make sure of protectors for her son, Madame Gilet was
careful not to
enlighten his reputed fathers as to his parentage. In
Paris, she would have turned out a
millionaire; at Issoudun she lived
sometimes at her ease, more often
miserably, and, in the long run,
despised. Madame Hochon, Lousteau's sister, paid sixty francs a year
for the lad's schooling. This liberality, which Madame Hochon was
quite
unable to
practise on her own
account because of her husband's
stinginess, was naturally attributed to her brother, then living at
Sancerre.
When Doctor Rouget, who certainly was not lucky in sons, observed
Max's beauty, he paid the board of the "young rogue," as he called
him, at the
seminary, up to the year 1805. As Lousteau died in 1800,
and the doctor
apparently obeyed a feeling of
vanity in paying the
lad's board until 1805, the question of the paternity was left forever
undecided. Maxence Gilet, the butt of many jests, was soon forgotten,
--and for this reason: In 1806, a year after Doctor Rouget's death,
the lad, who seemed to have been created for a venturesome life, and
was
moreovergifted with
remarkable vigor and agility, got into a