MODERN HUGUENOTS.
It demands a good deal of energy, and it involves a little
hardship, to see the Protestant communities of the High Alps of
France, but the picturesque and historic interests of the
journey furnish a sufficient motive and make ample amends. I
can think of no route so entirely unhackneyed to recommend to
blasé tourists. The point of departure is Grenoble,
reached in an hour or so from Chambéry, and in itself
well worth turning aside from the Mont Cenis thoroughfare to
visit. As far as Corps the way lies over the beaten track of
the Salette pilgrims, of which the charms are recorded in many
a devout description.
It happened to us, however, to get a preliminary glimpse of
French Protestantism in a characteristic, although wholly
modern, development before leaving Grenoble. We applied to the
Protestant clergyman there for information respecting the
details of our proposed tour. Pleased with our project, he told
us the story of a mission which he had established under
circumstances altogether unique, and invited us to join him in
paying it a visit. The scene of his enterprise was a sunny
little village lying high among vineyarded hills, and bearing
the name of Notre Dame des Commiers. Owing to its remoteness
and insignificance, the Roman Catholic authorities had never
replaced its last priest, who withdrew during the turmoils of
the Revolution. For all their ecclesiastical needs the people
were obliged to descend to the next village, the curé of
which gave them little pastoral care beyond the thrifty
collection of his dues. Learning these facts, our Grenoble
friend determined to take advantage of the situation. He
presented himself in the village and told the people he was
willing to become their pastor. He only asked them to
acknowledge the validity of baptism and marriage performed by
him, and to pledge him their support in the struggle with the
priests that would probably ensue. Later, he said, he hoped to
convince them that he taught a better religion than that at the
hands of whose ministers they had suffered such neglect. A
majority of the villagers accepted his proposal, and by a
formal act constituted themselves a Protestant commune. By so
doing they were able to secure recognition by the government as
belonging to the National Protestant Church of France. It was
not long before the parishioners grew warmly attached to their
new pastor. His position of assistant at Grenoble enabled him
to assume the sole charge of the enterprise. Week after week he
made the tedious stage-coach journey, walking up the two-mile
hill at the foot of which he had to quit the highway. Often in
winter he toiled for hours through deep snow and faced violent
storms in making the ascent. In the worst weather it sometimes
happened that the whole journey from Grenoble had to be made on
foot. For two years he carried on the work unaided, holding his
services in such rude quarters as he was able to secure. The
village is now, after an interval of seven years since the
missionary's first visit, adorned with a pretty chapel and
school-house and provided with a resident minister.
In talking with the people we found abundant proof that
their Protestant faith is both intelligent and practical. Such
of them as were not busy in the fields surrounded their old
pastor with greetings that touchingly expressed their affection
and gratitude, and we, as his friends, had a share in the
demonstration. One stalwart, clear-eyed old woman obliged us to
sit down in front of her chalet, cheerfully explaining that she
had just been burned out, and that the shed in which she had
found a shelter was not fit for us to enter. She would take no
refusal of her offer to fetch us grapes, and ran all the way to
and from her vineyard on the opposite hillside, returning in an
incredibly short time,
scarcely out of breath, and carrying a basket heavy with great
white and purple clusters. As she stood watching with delight
our appreciation of her produce—the only sweet and
luscious grapes, by the way, that we found throughout the
autumn in that land of vines—she talked frankly of her
religious vicissitudes, summing up as follows: "The priests
used to say to me that I had turned Protestant because that is
an easier religion than the Roman Catholic. But I have not
found it so at all. Il est beaucoup plus facile de me
confesser que de me corriger." Presently another woman came
up the hill, bending painfully under the weight of two
water-pails hanging from the ends of a yoke that rested on her
shoulders. "Ah," said our hostess, "if they would but let us
build the aqueduct, we should not have that ugly work to do."
And then we learned that among the small minority of Roman
Catholics left in the village, to care for whom, as soon as it
was found a wolf had entered the fold, a priest arrived
promptly enough, there prevail the wildest superstitions
concerning the Protestants. Among many improvements introduced
by the latter an aqueduct had been planned to furnish the
hamlet with wholesome water. The project was defeated by the
opposition of the Roman Catholics, who considered it a scheme
for poisoning them en masse. It was here that we heard
for the first time the epithet Huguenots applied as a term of
reproach and derision to the Protestants. Afterward, in regions
where Protestants have a history of centuries, we found it
commonly used in the same way.
Our visit to Notre Dame des Commiers was like reading a
living page of early Reformation history, and the whole
neighborhood made a fitting stage for such a reproduction. Some
six or seven miles from Grenoble we passed the restored but
still, in parts at least, historic château of
Lesdiguières at Vizille. Nearer our mountain-village we
stopped to admire an ivy-covered bit of tower-ruin, associated
by a grim tradition with the same Dauphiné hero. A
prisoner confined here by the apostate constable had, says the
legend, a lady true who came every night and clasped her
lover's hand stretched out to her between the bars of his
dungeon window. Lesdiguières discovered the rendezvous,
and the spot is still pointed out where his soldier was
stationed one fatal night to chop off the hand that sought its
accustomed pledge. The historical associations of our excursion
were, indeed, somewhat confused, but a fresh feature was added
to its interest by the departure, which we chanced to witness,
of Monsieur Thiers from the Château de Vizille, now
occupied by Casimir Perier, whom the ex-president had been
visiting.
The two days' diligence journey from Grenoble to the
département des Hautes-Alpes was over one of those broad
macadamized highways which make driving a luxury in many parts
of Europe. If we were more huddled than in the less-antiquated
Swiss diligences, we had the compensation of far more original
fellow-travelers than one is apt to find among the tourists
that monopolize those vehicles. There were generally two or
three priests, half a dozen merry peasants, and a sprinkling of
small officers and country-townspeople, who respectively lost
no time in establishing a pleasant intimacy with their
neighbors. The unflagging chatter, in which all joined
vivaciously, and often all at once, was in striking contrast
with the silent gloom which would have enshrouded a similar
party of English or American travelers. It was impossible to
resist the contagion of cheerfulness or to refuse to mingle
more or less in the talk.
On the second evening, having trusted to the map and the
very meagre information supplied by Murray, we found
ourselves deposited at an isolated wayside cabaret. It
presently transpired that St. Bonnet, where we expected to pass
the Sunday, was some half mile or more off the high-road on
which this was the nearest station. While we waited in a long,
low, dimly-lighted room for the guide we had bespoken, two
gendarmes and a peasant sat listening to, or rather looking at,
a vivid account of some shooting adventure given in
extraordinary pantomime
by a deaf and dumb huntsman. In time a withered gnome trundling
a wheelbarrow took possession of us and our light belongings,
and led us forth into the night. We traversed the valley,
mounted the hill on the other side, and at last entered the
deeper night of a lampless village, and began to thread its
steep, black streets. The only gleam of light was at what
seemed to be the central fountain. Many women were gathered
there, chatting as they filled their pails or stood with the
replenished vessels poised on their heads. The inn was of a
piece with all those at which we lodged in Dauphiné,
deficient in everything for which an inn exists. The feature of
these inns which I remember, I think, with the least relish was
the condition of the floors. It is literally true that they are
never washed. A daily sprinkling is the only cleansing process
they undergo: its effect is to soften the wood until it begins
to absorb a large proportion of the rubbish which is often but
never thoroughly swept up, and grows black and evil-odored.
This result is most manifest, of course, and most offensive in
the dining-rooms.
St. Bonnet offered even less than we anticipated of
interest. On the Sunday morning we gladly drove away in such an
equipage as the place afforded to the not very distant village
of St. Laurent en Champsaur. Here we reached our first point in
what was fifty years ago the parish of Felix Neff, and has been
for centuries a refuge of Protestantism. It is a hamlet of
stone cottages, lying on a kind of plateau and overlooking a
wide and fertile valley. The surrounding hills, though mostly
bare, were broken and beautified on that still autumn morning
with dim clefts of shadow. The sun was not yet high, and broad
masses of purple fell here and there across the plain and the
brawling stream that divides it, still the Drac, which we had
seen an almost stately river near Grenoble.
Having already learned something of the local habits, we
bade our driver take us to the temple. That is the
distinctive name of a Protestant church in these Roman Catholic
lands. The morning service was in progress when we entered the
square and austere little chapel. Every pew was occupied, the
men and women taking different sides of the one stone-paved
aisle. A gentle-looking old man was reading from a book with
much clearness and expression, and in a singularly pleasant
voice, what we soon found to be an excellent sermon. At its
close a quaint, slow hymn was sung, and the congregation was
dismissed. To our amusement, the simple folk formed a double
line outside the door to inspect us as we emerged. It was easy
to imagine their interest in an apparition so unusual as
foreign visitors, and we submitted to their curious but
entirely respectful scrutiny, wishing that our aspect might
give them half the satisfaction we had in watching their eager
faces and noting their droll costumes. Ludicrously high stocks
and "swallow-tail" coats of brown homespun made the dress of
the men different from that of corresponding rustics in
America. The chief peculiarity in the women's attire was a
straw hat, of which the towering crown, decked with huge bows,
and the vast flapping brim, were like an extravagant caricature
of the poke-bonnets of our grandmothers.
As we stood demurely in the midst of the group, the old man
who had read, and who proved to be the schoolmaster, hastened
out to greet us. It was his habit, he said, in the pastor's
absence, to conduct the service. For more than thirty years,
although the parish had repeatedly been for months without a
minister, he had not allowed the temple to remain closed a
single Sunday. His wife appeared directly, and both insisted,
with apologies for their peasant fare, that we should stop to
dinner at their house, a few yards from the church. We were in
truth nothing loath to accept the invitation, and found little
to excuse in the savory soup, the fresh-laid eggs and the fruit
that composed the simple feast, while we were scarcely less
regaled with the neatness of the rooms and the spectacle of
well-washed floors and spotless though coarsely-woven linen.
But most of all to be enjoyed and remembered was the peep we got into
this good old man's life and history. From his youth he had
been schoolmaster at St. Laurent, and it seemed never to have
occurred to him that he might claim a more distinguished post.
Unconscious of any special self-sacrifice, he told us about his
work, heroic through its quiet faithfulness, in that obscure
hamlet. He enumerated with pride the various pastors and
teachers who had been his scholars—among the former his
eldest son, among the latter two of his daughters. Listening to
his talk, we understood the intelligence of expression in many
faces and the large proportion of young men at the service of
the morning.
In our walks about the village after dinner the schoolmaster
took us to see an ancient woman who in her youth had been a
catechumen of Felix Neff. It is curious to find that term,
which was applied by the early Church to candidates for
admission, in use now among the Protestants of France and
Italy. With tears in her eyes and an enthusiasm that made her
speech almost incoherent, the grandame talked of "Monsieur
Neff," his courage, his friendliness, how he went among his
people like one of themselves, and what good words he always
spoke. As we left St. Laurent our host and his wife bore us
company to the brow of a little hill whither we had sent on our
chaise, and stood there to wave us an adieu as we descended on
the other side. Then we saw them turn back toward the group of
thatched and moss-grown cottages which was all their world.
That evening we reached Gap, the capital of the department
of the High Alps, and once an important Protestant centre.
Farel, the French Reformer of the sixteenth century, was born
and for a time preached here. But since the Revocation of the
Edict of Nantes until very lately—during a period, that
is, of nearly two hundred years—no Protestant pastor has
been tolerated in the town, and the once numerous flock was
long since dispersed. A Swiss society undertook two or three
years ago a Protestant mission at Gap, and a friend in Geneva
had given us the name of the present evangelist. A humbler or
more thankless charge could scarcely be imagined than such a
work in such a place. There is no nucleus of hereditary
Protestants, as in the mountain-parishes of the department, and
at the same time the little city is so isolated that its people
have retained the superstitions and religious animosities of
the Dark Ages. It was therefore with much compassionate thought
of his pitiful case that we sought the evangelist's house. He
was not, however, a man toward whom one could maintain for a
moment that frame of mind. Brisk, cheerful, polished in manner
and with an unsought elegance of dress and carriage, he had not
in the least the air of a despised heretic struggling
hopelessly against social as well as ecclesiastical contempt.
Six avowed converts were the definite results of his work for
more than two years. During much of that time he had been
hampered by insuperable difficulties in finding a place for his
service or even a lodging for his family. The latter was at
last provided, as a daring defiance of popular prejudice, by a
landlord who prided himself upon being a libre penseur.
For his chapel he secured a disused shop in the front of a
bath-house. The proprietress of the establishment was punished
by the priests for her unrighteous thrift by being refused the
sacrament. Her business, too, was for a while endangered. One
instance out of many of the kind of prejudice she provoked was
that of two wealthy and educated ladies, who, as they entered
the bath one day, heard music in the chapelle
évangélique and instantly beat a hurried
retreat. They only stopped to explain that all the world knows
the object of Protestant worship is the devil, and they dare
not stay within hearing of the sacrilegious rites. In spite of
multiform discouragements like these, the evangelist and his
wife, a motherly woman of much quiet strength, whose gentleness
made sweet a very homely face, talked of their work and
prospects with a matter-of-course hopefulness which it was not
easy to share. Nothing in their habits, they told us, had more amazed their Roman
Catholic neighbors at first than their lavish use of water. But
in that particular, at least, suspicion had been allayed, their
perseverance had proved the practice harmless, and their
example was beginning to find a few timid imitators.
Our first night after leaving Gap was spent at Embrun. As we
approached the town, which surmounts an extraordinary platform
of rock, its walls looking like part of the smooth, brown tufa
precipice that rises abruptly out of the valley, we seemed to
see in its picturesque and impressive aspect something of the
grandeur and gloom of its long history. The cathedral where so
many archbishops have ministered preserves little trace of its
former splendors: even architecturally it is without
attraction.
For the next two days our route continued to lie through the
valley, which we entered upon leaving Gap, of the Durance. It
is an apparently insignificant but treacherous stream, which by
repeated floods has spread ugly devastation over a hill-girdled
country that ought to be smiling with peace and plenty. At
Guillestre we came in sight of the jagged double peak of Mont
Pelvoux, and got a magnificent vista toward the south, ending
in the white slopes of some giant of the Cottian Alps. The Mont
Pelvoux and the Pointe des Écrins, the greatest of those
mountains from which the department takes its name, although
they appear on none of the ordinary maps, stand, I believe,
only twelfth and thirteenth in the scale of height among the
mountains of Europe. The explorations of Whymper have
introduced them to his readers, but they still remain almost
untrodden by other climbers.
On the second afternoon we reached the lateral valley of
Fressinière, the climax of our journey. There was
refreshment for soul as well as body in the daintily-clean,
bare-floored rooms, redolent of apples set out to dry, into
which we were welcomed by Pastor Charpiot and his wife at
Pallons. The village is a mere group of Alpine huts, and the
only chance of shelter was at the presbytery. So much we had
little doubt of finding there, but we counted as little upon
the warm and graceful hospitality which greeted our
application. And when our nationality transpired it added new
zest to the good-will of our host and hostess. We were their
first Transatlantic guests.
The valley of Fressinière, at the entrance of which
Pallons lies, is the centre of those special interests which
first prompted the pilgrimage I am recording. With it are
specially associated the earliest traditions of Protestantism
in France, and here Felix Neff spent the larger part of his
brief but memorable career as pastor in the High Alps. I
suppose the exact antiquity of the Protestants of
Dauphiné is one of the historical problems that still
await their final solution. The older chronicles provide them
with what seems an unbroken line of descent from the second
century, when Irenæus preached in Lyons and Vienne.
Christian fugitives from those cities during the persecution of
Marcus Aurelius may, it is alleged, have taken refuge in the
not distant Dauphiné mountains, and have transmitted to
their descendants the primitive faith they had received. But
modern criticism has so seriously undermined, as practically to
have demolished, this imposing genealogical structure. It is
not denied that voices of more or less emphatic protest against
Rome made themselves heard among these mountains and the
neighboring Cottian Alps during the earlier centuries. Can such
voices be held to represent any definitely-organized
dissentient body of more remote origin than the Poor Men of
Lyons, led by Peter Waldo in 1172? The latest researches give
an apparently final negative answer to this question. At least,
however, it is beyond dispute that long before the Reformation
the valleys of the High Alps were a retreat for persecuted
schismatics whose opposition to the Romish Church anticipated
Protestantism. As early as the fifteenth century a papal bull
denounced as inveterate the heretics of Dauphiné
and Provence, and about the middle of the next century
delegates from those provinces appeared at the first national
Protestant synod in
France with the following declaration: "We consent to merge in
the common cause, but we require no Reformation, for our
forefathers and ourselves have ever disclaimed the corruptions
of the churches in communion with Rome." Enough is therefore
certain as to the antecedents of these Protestant mountaineers
to surround them with an entirely peculiar interest. The
saddest feature, perhaps, of all their history is the stunting
of mind and character that has resulted from centuries of
oppression. After the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes they
were subject to fresh persecution, and until within the present
century they have been denied the privileges of citizenship and
forced to look upon themselves as outcasts. One can only wonder
at the degree of individuality and force which they have still
preserved.
Felix Neff, while still a proposant, or candidate for
the ministry, at Geneva, was sent to Dauphiné in
response to the appeal of two pastors there for an assistant.
Two years later, at the beginning of 1824, in the twenty-sixth
year of his age, he became pastor of the Protestant churches in
the Arvieux section of the High Alps. This was the larger and
by far the more arduous of the two parishes into which the
department was at that time divided. In seventeen or eighteen
widely-scattered villages Neff found the little groups of
"Huguenots" which composed his charge. His official residence,
the presbytery, was at La Chalp, a hamlet above the village of
Arvieux and near the border of Italy. From this point to St.
Laurent, the western limit of his parish, is a journey of sixty
miles, including the passage of a dangerous gorge and the
crossing of a difficult snow-pass. St. Véran on the east
was the least remote of his boundaries, but even this is
separated from La Chalp by twelve miles of steep descent and
rough climbing. On the north and the south the extreme points
were distant respectively thirty-three and twenty-miles, and
the routes are of the same character as in the other
directions.
These disadvantages, instead of daunting the young pastor,
seemed only to stimulate his ardor. "I am always dreaming of
the High Alps," he had written in 1823, after visiting them for
the first time. "I had rather be stationed there than in places
which are under the beautiful sky of Languedoc. The country
bears a strong resemblance to the Alps of Switzerland. It has
their advantages, and even their beauties. It has, above all,
an energetic race of people—intelligent, active, hardy
and patient under fatigue—who offer a better soil for the
gospel than the wealthy and corrupt inhabitants of the plains
of the South." The illusions that mingled with these early
impressions were doubtless soon dispelled. He shows later a
perfectly clear perception of the degenerate condition of his
parishioners, but his eagerness to serve them waxes with his
sense of their need. Neff was in modern times their first
regularly-appointed pastor. A son of Oberlin, whose short but
devoted life shows him to have inherited his father's spirit,
had once undertaken the provisional charge of the parish, but
only for a few months. In general, it had had no ministry
beyond occasional visits from the pastor of Orpierre, the other
section of the department.
The valley of Fressinière at once attracted Neff's
peculiar regard. It was the part of his parish most difficult
of access and most cut off from any chance of material
prosperity. The climate is such that in unfavorable seasons
even rye will not ripen, and the patches of potatoes straggling
forlornly among the rocks often fail to reach maturity. No
other grain or vegetable can be raised. Mould quickly attacks
the flour in this mountain-air, and the year's baking is
accordingly done in the autumn as soon as the rye comes back
from the mill. The coarse black loaves grow perfectly hard in a
few weeks, and have to be chopped into pieces and soaked in hot
water before they can be eaten. It is only at the head of the
valley, above the hamlet of Dourmillouse, that any pastures are
found, and many of those are inaccessible to cattle and
scarcely safe for sheep. They are besides so meagre that in dry
summers no hay can be
made, and the peasants are forced to sell their beasts at a
loss or else see them die for want of food. The addition of a
little salted meat to the half-grown potatoes and the stony
bread is a luxury of only the most prosperous years. The bald
mountain-slopes furnish no fuel, and it is of course only in
the smallest quantities that the people can afford to buy wood
in the valley of the Durance. Their resource against the
winter's cold is moving into their stables, where, huddled
together in a corner cleared for the purpose, they pass four or
five months. The smoky and confined air is a welcome change
from the icy winds outside, and the steaming cattle are a
source of grateful warmth. "This village," Neff writes, about
the middle of September, from the smallest and most destitute
of the hamlets of Fressinière, "is squeezed up in the
very narrowest gorge of the valley, and is now buried in snow,
and without the hope of seeing the sun during the rest of the
winter. The houses are low, dark and dirty, and the people
themselves seem to be stupefied with the utter misery of their
condition."
Besides the strong appeal thus made to his sympathy, the
young pastor nowhere else felt as in this valley the
inspiration of his parish's history. Dourmillouse especially he
regarded as the most staunchly Protestant of all the villages
to which he ministered. "It is celebrated," he writes, "for the
resistance which its inhabitants have opposed for more than six
hundred years to the Church of Rome. They never bowed their
knee before an idol, even when all the inhabitants of the
valley of Queyras" (on the opposite side of the Durance, and
embracing Arvieux, St. Véran and other villages)
"dissembled their faith. The aspect of this desert, both
terrible and sublime, which served as the asylum of truth when
almost all the world lay in darkness; the recollection of the
faithful martyrs of old; the deep caverns into which they
withdrew to read the Bible in secret and to worship the Father
of Light in spirit and in truth,—everything tends to
elevate my soul." He spent here the whole of one winter and
large portions of another, and it was here that he gathered his
most important schools.
The rest of the field was not, however, neglected. Neff
allowed himself twenty-one days for traversing his parish from
end to end, and during much of the year his rounds succeeded
each other with little interval. He was continually passing
from the extreme of heat in sunny valleys to the arctic cold of
snows and glaciers. His lodging on these journeys was in the
huts of the peasants. He shared their coarse and unwholesome
food, often cooked in ill-cleansed copper vessels. He slept in
small, unventilated hovels, a dozen other persons often
dividing with him the scanty space. He did not shrink from even
the stables in winter. However exhausted he might be by hours
of toilsome walking, his elastic spirit quickly revived: all
thought of refreshment for himself was secondary to the
spiritual wants he sought to meet in others.
Nor was he content without trying to ameliorate the temporal
condition of his parishioners. By the care of his own garden he
sought to teach them more intelligent and productive methods of
agriculture than the rude processes to which they were
accustomed. In the valley of Fressinière he built an
aqueduct for purposes of irrigation, overcoming prejudice and
opposition by beginning the work with his own hands. The
example of Oberlin was constantly before him, and he often
expresses his ambition to be to his people such a guide and
helper as the pastor of Ban de la Roche had been to the
peasants of the Vosges.
Neff was not long in discovering that his work must begin
with the most elementary instruction. Generally, the people
were ignorant of any language but their native patois. Up to
this period their schoolmasters, paid at the rate of
twenty-five francs a year, had been peasants like themselves.
Their only time for study was such of the year as was not
needed for the tilling of the niggardly soil or spent in the
care of the flocks. And even the little they were able to learn
was easily lost on account of the scarcity of books. Neff first
addressed himself to
learning the patois, and then, as he went from village to
village, made ordinary teaching a part of his pastoral
functions. At the beginning of his second winter he resolved to
undertake the training of teachers. "I foresaw," he writes,
"that the truth which I had been permitted to preach would not
only not spread, but might even be lost, unless something
should be done to promote its continuance." Accordingly, for
five months he relinquished the more congenial general work of
his parish and devoted himself to a normal school at
Dourmillouse. One reason for planting it there was the
inaccessibility of the place and its consequent freedom from
distraction. More than twenty young men from other villages
cheerfully submitted to the long confinement in this ice-bound
fastness, and the people of Dourmillouse were glad to make room
in their huts for the new-comers, and to add to the supplies
brought by them their own scanty stores.
The following winter, his third in the High Alps, Neff again
opened this school, dividing its care, however, with one of his
most capable pupils of the previous year, and paying occasional
visits to other parts of his parish. But now his health, never
robust, began to give way under the incessant strain to which
it was subjected. Early in the spring of 1829 he was forced to
go to Geneva with the hope of recruiting. There, after two
years of suffering, the details of which are painful beyond
expression, he died at the age of thirty-one.
With our minds full of these memories we set out on the
morning after our arrival at Pallons, with Pastor Charpiot as
guide, to explore the valley of Fressinière and ascend
to Dourmillouse. The immediate vicinity of Pallons is fair and
fertile, but a short walk up the course of an impetuous torrent
brought us to a narrow gorge, beyond which we found a totally
different region. Bare slopes of rock that looked grim even in
the sunny morning, and a waste valley-bottom, here of
considerable width, but sterile and bleak, made up the
landscape. Its dreariness was only increased by an occasional
chalet standing beside a patch of limp and discolored
potato-vines. As we went on the scene grew more and more
gloomy. The tillage is in cleared spots not so large as the
heaps of stones that surround them, or on bits of practicable
soil left by land-slides in the midst of their hideous
débris. The only trees are dwarfish pollards, reduced to
bare trunks with thin tufts of green atop by the practice of
stripping off the sprouts every two or three years to make
fodder for the goats. Midway up the valley we passed the
village of Violins. It seemed mournfully empty, and many of the
houses were in reality deserted. A shy, bright-faced fellow
opened the little temple for our inspection, and Pastor
Charpiot reminded us how its interior was not only planned by
Neff, but in large measure his actual handiwork. Half an hour
further on our path led us through the hamlet of Minsas, now
entirely abandoned and in ruins. The desolation of the valley
here becomes appalling. On either hand sheer precipices of
crumbling rock rise above steep slopes of gravel and loose
stones. The ground is strewn thick with great boulders, many of
which had left traces of their furious descent before settling,
sometimes close beside the path, or even after crossing it in a
final bound. The precipices from which they had detached
themselves are composed of strangely-twisted strata, and
frequently recurring streaks of lurid red give them a fierce
and ghastly aspect. Landslips and torrents of stones are so
frequent of late years that no more attempts are made to clear
away the rubbish thus deposited. Where these scourges have not
fallen the sullen stream has carried devastation. Floods occur
every year. That of 1856 wrought a ruin from which the villages
have never rallied. In the whole upper half of the valley of
Fressinière there is not, I suppose, an acre of land
capable of cultivation. In the time of Neff, wretched as its
condition must always have been, the poverty of this region was
not so utterly hopeless as it has since become. The failure of
all resources is literally driving away its inhabitants. Those
who remain, as in such cases a certain proportion cannot help doing, sometimes in
bad years pass three, six, and even nine, months without bread.
Their small stock of potatoes is often exhausted long before it
can be replenished. "I am at a loss," said the pastor, "when we
are no longer able to give them aid, to know how they live. The
only semblance of food left to them is soup, for which,
perhaps, they haven't even salt, much less meat or vegetables.
Turbid water—de l'eau trouble, rien de plus!"
The valley terminates abruptly at what seems an impassable
wall of rock. Upon nearer approach a zigzag path up its face is
discovered. Not far from the top the narrow way creeps by a
ledge which barely affords foothold across a thread of
sparkling foam slipping down a perpendicular precipice. In
winter this passage is sheeted in dangerously unstable ice, and
makes Dourmillouse inaccessible for weeks. Neff gives a
spirited account in his journal of leading out a party of young
peasants by torchlight, armed with axes, to cut a path here on
the evening before some service in which he wished the people
of the upper and lower valleys to unite. Dourmillouse lies on a
slope above this difficult ascent. It is a mere group of rude
chalets, like the other villages, but it has a less miserable
air. The land-slides are mostly confined to the lower valley,
and here the scanty Alpine pastures and steep patches of rye
are out of reach of the floods. The people are seldom reduced
to actual want of food, and are esteemed prosperous by their
more destitute neighbors below.
Our first visit was to the old priory in which Neff held his
winter schools. A row of half a dozen trees planted by him in
front of the house now shuts off a good deal of much-needed
sunshine, but is nevertheless carefully cherished as a
memorial. Beside the priory stands the temple, once a
Roman Catholic church, in which, before the Revolution, a
priest is said to have ministered for twenty-five years without
making a single convert, his own servant constituting his
flock. Presently we went to rest and eat the lunch Pastor
Charpiot had brought, at the house of the local ancien,
or elder. His wife, a sturdy, smiling young woman, gave us an
eager welcome. Two round-cheeked boys frisked about their old
friend the pastor, and a baby—its spirits quite unclouded
by its austere surroundings—crowed lustily from the
cradle in which, after the fashion of the country, it was
tightly strapped. It was a low, grimy room, with one square bit
of a window, and far from clean. Dr. Gilly, the prim English
biographer of Neff, quaintly says: "Cleanliness is not a virtue
which distinguishes any of the people in these mountains; and,
with such a nice sense of moral perception as they display, and
with such strict attention to the duties of religion, it is
astonishing that they have not yet learnt those ablutions in
their persons or habitations which are as necessary to comfort
as to health." I suspect, however, that the nicest "sense of
moral perception" in the world would excuse the omission of a
good many "ablutions" in a place where all the water that is
used has to be carried more than a quarter of a mile up a steep
and rough mountain-path from the nearest stream. And there was
one refinement in the rude chalet not always present in regions
far less removed from the centres of civilization: besides the
cloth—so coarse as to be a curiosity—which the
woman laid for us over an end of the unscoured table, she put
at each of our places, as a matter of course, a fresh napkin of
the same rude stuff.
I could not sufficiently admire the brave cheerfulness of
these simple folk. Many of the villagers were busy gathering
their little stock of potatoes, and all had something bright to
say about their good fortune in getting them so well grown and
safely stored before the frosts. It was the last week in
September, and they thought the winter already close at hand.
There was, too, in spite of a shrinking from strangers
painfully suggestive of tendencies inherited from generations
of persecuted ancestors, a degree of intelligence and
self-respect often wanting among peasants far more favorably
circumstanced. And it seemed to me worthy of remark that in all our
walk—notwithstanding the valley's unexampled
poverty—we did not encounter a single beggar. Before we
left Dourmillouse the "elder" appeared, a stalwart young
mountaineer with his gun slung across his shoulder. He had
finished his morning's work in some distant field, and was off
for a chamois-hunt among the rocks and glaciers. As a relic of
our visit he gave us a block of rye bread twenty-two months
old, which he chopped off the loaf with a hatchet.
We had frequent evidence in the course of our excursion that
Pastor Charpiot is a real shepherd to his needy flock. Indeed,
he gave to the walk an intimate and peculiar interest quite
apart from its historical associations. Here he bade us go
slowly on while he looked in upon a sick man, explaining that
he had to be doctor as well as minister. Again he asked us to
stop and share with him some of the grapes which a stout young
peasant-woman was bringing on her donkey from the Durance
vineyards, and which had no sweetness save in the good-will
that offered them. For all whom we met he had a cheery greeting
or an affectionate inquiry that showed familiar acquaintance
with their concerns; and occasionally a word or two suggested a
truth or hope, aptly illustrated in some passing incident, no
matter how trifling or homely.
A storm was gathering in the mountains as we made our way
back to Pallons through the deepening shadows of the autumn
afternoon. Before we emerged from the desolate valley its gloom
had grown almost intolerable; and yet this was but a suggestion
of the winter horrors which the white-haired pastor at our side
had faced for years in his regular ministrations at the
different hamlets we had visited. Speaking of the five pastors
now distributed over the field of which Neff assumed the whole
charge, he said with a modesty that was quite unaffected, "All
five together, we are not worth him alone" (nous ne le
valons pas). What we had seen that day convinced us that so
far at least as concerned himself his deprecation was
unfounded, but in expressing it he echoed the tone that seemed
universal in the High Alps in reference to the illustrious
young pastor. Neff could not, of course, in his short career
accomplish the permanent revolution which he dreamed of and
longed for. At the same time, it cannot be said that his work
has perished while not only pastors but people feel so strongly
the inspiration of that heroic life.
JAMES M. BRUCE. |