Marie Claire
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Marguerite Audoux >> Marie Claire
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I was not at all surprised at meeting him there. I showed him the
church and asked him what it was. "It was for you," he said. "I was
afraid that you would not find the avenue of chestnut trees, and I hung
up a lantern on each side." I felt all confused. It was only a few
moments afterwards that I understood that the great pillars, blackened
and worn by centuries, were simply the trunks of the chestnut trees,
and then I recognized the small-paned windows of the farmhouse kitchen,
which the fire lit up from inside. Eugene counted the sheep himself.
He helped me to make them a warm litter of straw, and as we left the
pen together he asked me if I really didn't know what had become of the
two lambs that had been lost. I felt dreadfully ashamed at the thought
that he could believe that I had told a lie, and I could not help
crying, and told him that they had disappeared without my having seen
how or where they went. Then he told me that he had found them drowned
in a water-hole. I thought he was going to scold me for not having
watched them better, but he said gently, "Go and get warm; you have got
all the rime of Sologne in your hair." I made up my mind that I would
go and see the waterhole. But during the night snow fell so quickly
that we couldn't go out to the fields next day.
I helped old Bibiche to mend the household linen; Martine sat down to
her spinning wheel, and I sang to them while we sewed and Martine span.
While we sat at work that evening the dogs never stopped barking.
Martine seemed anxious. She listened to the dogs, and then turning to
the farmer she said, "I am afraid this weather will bring the wolves
down." The farmer got up to go out and talk to the dogs, and took his
lantern to make a round of the outhouses. During the week that the
snow lasted hundreds of crows came to the farm. They were so hungry
that nothing frightened them. They went into the cow-house and the
pens and into the granary, and they made very free with the corn ricks.
The farmer killed a lot of them. We cooked some of them with bacon and
cabbage. Everybody thought them very good, but the dogs wouldn't eat
them.
The first day we let the sheep and cows out, the pine trees were still
heavy with snow. The hill was all white too. It seemed to have come
closer to the farm. All this white dazzled me. I could not find
things in their places, and every moment I was afraid that I should not
see the blue smoke curling up over the farm roofs any longer. The
sheep could not find anything to eat, and ran about searching. I did
not let them scatter too much. They looked like moving snow, and I was
obliged to watch them closely so as not to lose sight of them. I
managed to get them together in a meadow which skirted a big wood. The
whole forest was busy getting rid of the snow which weighed it down.
The big branches threw the snow off at one shake, while the others
which were not so strong, stooped and bent themselves to make it slip
down. I had never been into this forest. I only knew that it was a
very big one, and that Martine sometimes took her sheep there. The
pine trees were very tall, and the ferns grew very high.
I had been watching a big clump of ferns for a long time. I thought I
had seen it move, and I heard a sound come out of it as though a bit of
stick had broken under a footstep. I felt frightened. I thought there
was somebody there. Then I heard the same sound again much nearer, but
without seeing anything move. I tried to reassure myself by saying to
myself that it was a hare, or some other little animal which was
looking for food; but in spite of all I could try to think, I felt
there was somebody there. I felt so nervous that I made up my mind to
go nearer the farm. I had taken two steps towards my sheep when they
huddled together and moved away from the wood. I was looking about to
see what had frightened them, when quite close to me, in the very
middle of the flock, I saw a yellow dog carrying off one of the sheep
in his mouth. My first idea was that Castille had gone mad; but at the
same moment Castille tumbled up against my dress and howled
plaintively. Then I guessed that it was a wolf. It was carrying off a
sheep which it held by the middle of its body. It climbed up a hillock
without any difficulty, and as it jumped the broad ditch which
separated the field from the forest its hind legs made me think of
wings. At that moment I should not have thought it at all
extraordinary if it had flown away over the trees. I stood there for a
few moments, without knowing whether I was frightened. Then I felt
that I could not take my eyes away from the ditch. My eyelids had
become so stiff that I thought I should never be able to close them
again. I wanted to call out, so that they should hear me at the farm,
but I could not get my voice out of my throat. I wanted to run, but my
legs were trembling so that I was obliged to sit down on the wet grass.
Castille went on howling as though she were in pain, and the sheep
remained huddled together.
When I got them back to the farm at last, I ran to look for Master
Silvain. As soon as he saw me he guessed what had happened. He called
his brother and took down their two guns, and I tried to show him which
way the wolf had gone. They both came back at nightfall without having
found him. We talked of nothing else all the evening. Eugene wanted
to know what the wolf looked like; and old Bibiche got angry when I
said that he had a long yellow coat like Castille, but that he was much
handsomer than she was.
A few days afterwards it was Martine's turn. She had just taken her
sheep out, and she had hardly reached the end of the avenue of chestnut
trees when we heard her shouting. Everybody rushed out of the house.
I got to Martine first. She was stooping down and pulling as hard as
she could at a sheep which a wolf had just killed, and was trying to
carry off. The wolf had the sheep by the throat, and was pulling as
hard as Martine was. Martine's dog bit the wolf's legs, but he didn't
seem to feel it, and when Master Silvain fired full at him he rolled
over with a piece of the sheep's throat between his teeth. Martine's
eyes were staring and her mouth had become quite white. Her cap had
slipped off her head, and the parting which divided her hair into two
made me think of a broad path on which one could walk without any
danger. The usual strong expression of her face had changed into a sad
little grimace, and her hands kept opening and closing, the two of them
keeping time. She had been leaning against the chestnut tree, and she
went up to Eugene, who was looking at the wolf. She stood by him for a
moment looking at the dead wolf too, and said aloud: "Poor brute! How
hungry he must have been!" The farmer put the wolf and the sheep on
the same wheelbarrow, and wheeled them back to the farm. The dogs
followed, sniffing at the barrow, and looking frightened.
For several days the farmer and his brother went out shooting in the
neighbourhood. Whenever Eugene came anywhere near me he would stop and
say a kind word. He told me that the noise they made with their guns
drove the wolves away, and that one very rarely saw any in that part of
the country. But although he said that there was little or no danger I
didn't dare go back to the big forest. I preferred to go up on to the
hill which was covered only with broom and ferns.
It the beginning of the spring the farmer's wife taught me how to milk
the cows and look after the pigs. She said she wanted to make a good
farmer of me. I could not help thinking of the Mother Superior and the
disdainful tone in which she had said to me, "You will milk the cows
and look after the pigs." When she said that, she said it as though
she were giving me a punishment, and here I was delighted at having
them to look after. I used to lean my forehead against a cow's flank
to get a better purchase, and I very soon filled my pail. At the top
of the milk a foam used to form which caught all kinds of changing
colours, and when the sun passed over it it became so marvellously
beautiful that I was never tired of looking at it.
Looking after the pigs never disgusted me. Their food was boiled
potatoes and curdled milk. I used to dip my hands into the bucket to
mix it all up, and I loved making them wait for their food a few
minutes. Their eager cries and the way they wriggled their snouts
about always amused me.
When May came Master Silvain added a she goat to my flock. He had
bought it to help Pauline to feed the little baby she had got after
they had been married ten years. This goat was more difficult to take
care of than all the rest of the flock. It was always her fault when
my flock got into the standing oats, which were pretty high. The
farmer saw what had happened and scolded me. He said that I must have
been asleep in a corner while my sheep were trampling his oats down.
Every day I had to pass near a wood of young pine trees. The goat used
to get there in three jumps, and it was while I was looking for her
that my lambs got into the oats.
The first time I waited ever so long for her to come back by herself.
I made my voice as soft as I could and called to her. At last I made
up my mind to go and fetch her, but the young pines were so close
together that I didn't know how to get after her. On the other hand, I
could not go away without knowing what had happened to the goat. I
thought I remembered the place where she had disappeared, and I went in
there, putting my hands in front of my face to keep the thorns off. I
saw her almost at once through my fingers. She was quite near me. I
stretched my hands out to get hold of one of her horns, but she backed
through the branches, which flew back and struck me in the face. At
last, however, I got hold of her and brought her back to the flock.
She began again next day, and every day she did the same thing. I got
my sheep as far away as I could from the oats, and rushed after her.
She was a white goat, and the first time I saw her I thought that she
was like Madeleine. She had the same kind of eyes, set far away from
each other. When I forced her to come out of the pine trees, she
looked at me for a long time without moving her eyes, and I thought
that Madeleine must have been turned into a goat. Sometimes I told her
not to do it again, and I was quite sure that she understood me when I
told her how unkind she was. As I was struggling out of the pine wood
my hair fell all about me, and I shook my head to throw it forward.
The goat sprang to one side bleating with fear. She lowered her horns
and came at me, but I lowered my head and shook my hair at her. My
hair was long and dragged along the ground. She rushed off, leaping
this way and that. Every time she went into the pine wood I took my
revenge on her by frightening her with my hair. Master Silvain
surprised us one morning when I was butting at her. He laughed and
laughed till I didn't know which way to look. I tried to throw my hair
back quickly. The she goat came close up to me. She looked at me,
stretching her neck and wriggling her back about in the funniest way.
The farmer could not stop laughing. He bent almost double, holding his
sides and simply roared with laughter. All I could see of him were his
eyebrows, his beard, and his big hat. His shouts of laughter made me
want to cry. When he had stopped laughing he asked me all about it. I
told him how wicked the goat had been, and he shook his finger at her
and laughed again. Martine took her out next day; but the day after
she said that she would rather leave the farm than take out that she
goat again. It was possessed of the devil, she said.
Old Bibiche used to say that goats ought to be beaten, but I remembered
the only time I had beaten mine. Her ribs had made such a strange
hollow sound that I never dared touch her again. She was left free to
run about the farm, and one day she disappeared. We never found out
what had become of her.
The feast of St. John was drawing near, and to celebrate the
anniversary of my arrival on the farm Eugene said that I must be taken
to the village. In honour of this feast day the farmer's wife gave me
a yellow dress which she used to wear when she was a girl. The village
was called Sainte Montague. It only had one street, at the end of
which was a church. Martine took me into mass, which had already
begun. She pushed me on to a bench and she sat down on the one in
front of me. There were two women behind me who never stopped talking
about yesterday's market, and the men near the door talked out loud
without seeming to mind. They only stopped talking when the priest
mounted the pulpit. I thought he was going to preach, but he only gave
out notices of the weddings. Every time he mentioned a name the women
leaned to right and left and smiled. I never even thought of praying.
I looked at Martine, who was on her knees. Her dark curls had got out
from under her embroidered cap. Her shoulders were broad, and her
white bodice was fastened at the waist with a black ribbon. The whole
of her made one think of something fresh and new, and yet the Mother
Superior had told me that shepherdesses were dirty. I thought of
Martine and how smart she always looked in her short striped petticoat,
her stockings, which were always tightly drawn, and her wooden shoes
covered with leather, which she blacked like boots. She was always
very careful of her flock, and the farmer's wife used to say that she
knew every one of her sheep. When we came out of mass she left me and
ran up to an old woman, whom she kissed tenderly. Then I lost sight of
her and remained all by myself, not knowing where to go. A little way
off I saw the inn of the "White Horse." There was a noise of voices
there and I could hear dishes and plates rattling. People went in in
crowds, and presently there was nobody left outside. I was going back
into the church to wait for Martine to come and fetch me when I saw
Eugene. He took me by the hand, and said, laughing as he spoke, "If
your dress had not been as yellow as it is I should certainly have
forgotten you." He looked at me as though he were making fun of me and
as though he were amused at something. He took me to the schoolmaster
and asked him to give me luncheon, and to take me for a walk with the
children. The schoolmaster was dressed like the gentlemen of the town.
Eugene wore a blue blouse, and I was very much surprised to see them so
friendly together. While we were waiting for lunch the schoolmaster
lent me a book of fairy tales, and when the time came for the walk I
would much rather have been left alone to finish the book.
On the village green the boys and girls were dancing in the sunshine
and the dust. I thought that they danced too roughly, and that they
were too noisy.
I felt very sad, and when the cart drove us back to the farm at
nightfall I felt really glad to be back in the silence and the sweet
smell of the meadows again.
A few days after that, on our way home from the forest, a sheep which
had been grazing near the hedge jumped right up into the air. I went
to see what was the matter, and saw that his nose was bleeding. I
thought that he must have pricked himself with a big thorn, and after
having washed him I didn't think anything more about it. Next day I
was terrified to see that his head had swollen up till it was almost as
big as his body. It frightened me so much that I screamed. Martine
came running up, and she began screaming too, and everybody came. I
explained what had happened the day before, and the farmer said that
the sheep must have been bitten by a viper. He would have to be cared
for, and must be left in the stable until the swelling had gone down.
I asked nothing better than to look after the poor brute, but when I
was alone with it I felt frightened to death. That enormous head,
which wobbled on the little body, made me half crazy with terror. The
great big eyes, the enormous mouth and the ears, which stood straight
up, made a monster almost impossible to imagine. The poor beast always
remained in the middle of the stable, as though he were afraid of
bumping himself against the wall. I tried to go to him, telling myself
that it was only a sheep after all, but I could not. But directly he
turned towards me I felt dreadfully sorry for him. Sometimes I used to
think that this dreadful face which wobbled from right to left was
reproaching me. Then something seemed to wobble inside my head, and I
felt as though I were going mad. I quite understood that I was
perfectly capable of letting him die of hunger. I told the cowherd
about it, and he said that he would look after the sheep as long as the
inflammation lasted. He laughed at me a little, and said he could not
understand how I could be afraid of a sick sheep.
I was able to do him a good turn afterwards, and I was very glad. When
he let the bull out one morning, he had slipped and fallen in front of
him. The bull had sniffed and smelt at him. He was a young bull,
which had been brought up on the farm, and was a little bit wild. The
cowherd was afraid of him, and felt quite certain that he would
remember that he had seen him on the ground in front of him. I should
have liked to make him understand that there was nothing to be afraid
of, but I didn't know what to say to prevent his being frightened. I
was quite surprised at noticing all of a sudden how old he was. His
hat had dropped on to the ground, and I noticed for the first time that
his hair was quite grey. I thought about him all day long, and next
day, while the cows were going out one by one, I went into the stable.
The cowherd was looking at the bull, who was pulling at the chain. I
went up to him, patted him, and let him loose. The cowherd stood on
one side, and the bull rushed out as if he were mad. The herd looked
at him in surprise, and limped after him. I was not nearly so
frightened of the bull as I had been of the sheep with the swollen
face, and I used to go into the stable every day, slipping in quietly
so as not to be seen. But Eugene had seen me. He took me aside one
morning, and, looking right into my eyes with his little eyes, he said,
"Why did you let the bull loose?" I was afraid the cow-herd would be
scolded if I told the truth, and tried to find something to say to him.
I began to say that I didn't let him loose. Then Eugene gave a little
chuckle, and said, "You don't mean to tell me that you tell lies, do
you?" I told him everything, and they sold the bull next Saturday.
I had often noticed how kind Eugene was to everybody. Whenever the
farmer had any difficulties with his men he always used to call his
brother, who would settle everything with a few words. Eugene did the
same work on the farm as Master Silvain did, but he always refused to
go to market. He said that he would not know how to sell even a
cheese. He walked slowly, rocking himself a little as he walked, as
though he were trying to keep time with his oxen. He went to Sainte
Montagne nearly every Sunday. When the weather was bad he would remain
in the living-room at the farm house and read. I used to hope that he
would leave his book behind him one day; but he never forgot it, and
always took it to his room with him. One of my great troubles was that
I could not find anything to read in the farm, and I used to pick up
any bits of printed paper that I saw lying about. The farmer's wife
had noticed this, and said that I should become a miser some day. One
Sunday, when I had screwed up my courage and asked Eugene for a book,
he gave me a book of songs. All through the summer I took it with me
to the fields. I made up tunes for the songs which I liked best. Then
I got tired of them, and when I was helping Pauline to clean up the
farm for All Saints Day, I found several almanacks. Pauline told me to
take them up to the garret, but I pretended to forget, and carried them
off to read in secret, one after the other. They were full of amusing
stories, and the winter went by without my ever noticing the cold.
When I took them up to the garret at last, I hunted about up there to
see if I could not find any others. The only thing I found was a
little book without any cover. The corners of the leaves were rolled
up as if it had been carried about in somebody's pocket for a long
time. The two first pages were missing, and the third page was so
dirty that I could not read the print. I took it under the skylight,
to see a little better, and I saw that it was called "The Adventures of
Telemachus." I opened it here and there, and the few words that I read
interested me so much that I put it in my pocket at once.
While I was on my way down from the garret, it suddenly occurred to me
that Eugene might have put the book there, and that he might come and
look for it at any time. So I put it back on the black rafter where I
had found it. Every time I could manage to go to the garret I looked
to see whether it was still in its place, and I read it as much and as
often as ever I could.
Just about that time I had another sick sheep. Its flanks were hollow,
as though it had not eaten for a long while. I went and asked the
farmer's wife what I ought to do with it. She was plucking a chicken,
and asked me whether the sheep was "drawn." I didn't answer at once.
I didn't quite know what she meant. Then I thought that probably
whenever a sheep was ill it was "drawn," and I said "Yes." And so as
to make it quite clear, I added, "It is quite flat." Pauline began to
laugh at me. She called Eugene, and said, "Eugene! One of Marie
Claire's sheep is drawn and flat too." That made Eugene laugh. He
said I was only a second-hand shepherdess, and explained to me that
sheep were "drawn" when their stomachs were swollen.
Two days afterwards Pauline told me that she and Master Silvain saw
that they would never make a good shepherdess of me, and that they were
going to give me work to do in the house. Old Bibiche was not good for
much, and Pauline could not do everything herself because of her baby.
When they told me this, my first thought was that I should be able to
go up to the garret more often, and I kissed Pauline and thanked her.
So I became a farm servant. I had to kill the chickens and the
rabbits. I hated doing it, and Pauline could never understand why.
She said I was like Eugene, who ran away when a pig was being killed.
However, I wanted to try and kill a chicken so as to show that I did my
best. I took it into the granary. It struggled in my hands, and the
straw all round me got red. Then it became quite still, and I put it
down for Bibiche to come and pluck it. But when she came she cackled
with laughter because the chicken had got on to its feet again, and was
in the middle of a basket of corn. It was eating greedily, as though
it wanted to get well as quickly as possible after the way in which I
had hurt it. Bibiche got hold of it, and when she had passed the blade
of her knife across its neck the straw was much redder than it had been
before.
Instead of going to sleep in the middle of the day, I used to go up to
the garret to read. I opened the book anywhere, and every time I read
it over again I found something new in it. I loved this book of mine.
For me it was like a young prisoner whom I went to visit secretly. I
used to imagine that it was dressed like a page, and that it waited for
me on the black rafter. One evening I went on a lovely journey with
it. I had closed the book, and was leaning on my elbows and looking
out of the skylight in the garret. It was almost evening, and the pine
trees looked less green. The sun was pushing its way into the white
clouds which hollowed themselves and then swelled out again, like down
and feathers do when you push something into a sackful of them.
Without quite knowing how, I found myself, all of a sudden, flying over
a wood with Telemachus. He held me by the hand, and our heads touched
the blue of the sky. Telemachus said nothing, but I knew that we were
going up into the sun. Old Bibiche called to me from below. I
recognized her voice, although it was so far off. She must be very
angry, I thought, to be calling so loud. I didn't care. I saw nothing
but the bright flakes of white down, which surrounded the sun and which
were opening slowly to let us pass in. A tap on my arm brought me back
with a rush into the garret. Old Bibiche was pulling me away from the
skylight, and saying, "Why do you make me shout like that? I have
called you at least twenty times to come and get your supper!" A
little while later I missed the book from the rafter. But it had
become a friend which I carried about in my heart, and I have always
remembered it.
Two days before Christmas, Master Silvain got ready to kill a pig. He
sharpened two big knives, and, after having made a litter of fresh
straw in the middle of the yard, he sent for the pig, which made such a
noise that I was sure he knew what was going to happen. Master Silvain
roped up his four feet, and, while he fastened them to pegs which he
had hammered into the ground, he said to his wife, "Hide the knives,
Pauline. Don't let him see them!" Pauline gave me a sort of deep
dish, which I was to hold carefully, so as not to lose a single drop of
the blood which I was to catch in it. The farmer went to the pig,
which had fallen on its side. He went down on one knee in front of
him, and, after having felt his neck, he reached his hand out behind
his back to his wife; she gave him the bigger of the two knives. He
put the point on the place he had marked with his finger, and pressed
it slowly in. The pig's cries were just like the cries of a baby. A
drop of blood came from the wound and rolled slowly down in a long red
line. Then two spurts ran up the knife and fell on the farmer's hand.
When the blade was right in up to the handle. Master Silvain put his
weight on it for a moment and drew it out again as slowly as he had put
it in. When I saw the blade come out again all striped with red, I
felt my mouth grow cold and dry. My fingers went limp, and the dish
toppled over to one side. Master Silvain saw it. He gave me one look
and said to his wife, "Take the dish away from her." I could not say a
word, but I shook my head to say "No." The farmer's look had taken my
nervousness away, and I held the dish quite steadily under the spurt of
blood which came out from the pig's wound. When the pig was quite
still, Eugene came up. He looked amazed at seeing me carefully
catching the last red drops which were rolling down one by one like
tears. "Do you mean to say you caught the blood?" he asked. "Yes,"
said the farmer; "that shows that she is not a chicken heart, like
you." "It is quite true," said Eugene to me, "I hate seeing animals
killed." "Nonsense," said Master Silvain. "Animals are made to feed
us just as wood is made to warm us." Eugene turned away a little, as
though he were ashamed of his weakness. His shoulders were thin, and
his neck was as round as Martine's. Master Silvain used to say that he
was the living portrait of their mother.
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