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the country doctor-第22章

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e Grande Chartreuse。 Before the door of the dwelling; which was fairly clean and tidy; they saw a coffin set upon two chairs; and covered with a black pall。 Four tall candles stood about it; and on a stool near by there was a shallow brass dish full of holy water; in which a branch of green box…wood was steeping。 Every passer…by went into the yard; knelt by the side of the dead; said a Pater noster; and sprinkled a few drops of holy water on the bier。 Above the black cloth that covered the coffin rose the green sprays of a jessamine that grew beside the doorway; and a twisted vine shoot; already in leaf; overran the lintel。 Even the saddest ceremonies demand that things shall appear to the best advantage; and in obedience to this vaguely…felt requirement a young girl had been sweeping the front of the house。 The dead man's eldest son; a young peasant about twenty…two years of age; stood motionless; leaning against the door…post。 The tears in his eyes came and went without falling; or perhaps he furtively brushed them away。 Benassis and Genestas saw all the details of this scene as they stood beyond the low wall; they fastened their horses to one of the row of poplar trees that grew along it; and entered the yard just as the widow came out of the byre。 A woman carrying a jug of milk was with her; and spoke。

〃Try to bear up bravely; my poor Pelletier;〃 she said。

〃Ah! my dear; after twenty…five years of life together; it is very hard to lose your man;〃 and her eyes brimmed over with tears。 〃Will you pay the two sous?〃 she added; after a moment; as she held out her hand to her neighbor。

〃There; now! I had forgotten about it;〃 said the other woman; giving her the coin。 〃Come; neighbor; don't take on so。 Ah! there is M。 Benassis!〃

〃Well; poor mother; how are you going on? A little better?〃 asked the doctor。

〃DAME!〃 she said; as the tears fell fast; 〃we must go on; all the same; that is certain。 I tell myself that my man is out of pain now。 He suffered so terribly! But come inside; sir。 Jacques; set some chairs for these gentlemen。 Come; stir yourself a bit。 Lord bless you! if you were to stop there for a century; it would not bring your poor father back again。 And now; you will have to do the work of two。〃

〃No; no good woman; leave your son alone; we will not sit down。 You have a boy there who will take care of you; and who is quite fit to take his father's place。〃

〃Go and change your clothes; Jacques;〃 cried the widow; 〃you will be wanted directly。〃

〃Well; good…bye; mother;〃 said Benassis。

〃Your servant; gentlemen。〃

〃Here; you see; death is looked upon as an event for which every one is prepared;〃 said the doctor; 〃it brings no interruption to the course of family life; and they will not even wear mourning of any kind。 No one cares to be at the expense of it; they are all either too poor or too parsimonious in the villages hereabouts; so that mourning is unknown in country districts。 Yet the custom of wearing mourning is something better than a law or a usage; it is an institution somewhat akin to all moral obligations。 But in spite of our endeavors neither M。 Janvier nor I have succeeded in making our peasants understand the great importance of public demonstrations of feeling for the maintenance of social order。 These good folk; who have only just begun to think and act for themselves; are slow as yet to grasp the changed conditions which should attach them to these theories。 They have only reached those ideas which conduce to economy and to physical welfare; in the future; if some one else carries on this work of mine; they will come to understand the principles that serve to uphold and preserve public order and justice。 As a matter of fact; it is not sufficient to be an honest man; you must appear to be honest in the eyes of others。 Society does not live by moral ideas alone; its existence depends upon actions in harmony with those ideas。

〃In most country communes; out of a hundred families deprived by death of their head; there are only a few individuals capable of feeling more keenly than the others; who will remember the deaths for very long; in a year's time the rest will have forgotten all about it。 Is not this forgetfulness a sore evil? A religion is the very heart of a nation; it expresses their feelings and their thoughts; and exalts them by giving them an object; but unless outward and visible honor is paid to a God; religion cannot exist; and; as a consequence; human ordinances lose all their force。 If the conscience belongs to God and to Him only; the body is amenable to social law。 Is it not therefore; a first step towards atheism to efface every sign of pious sorrow in this way; to neglect to impress on children who are not yet old enough to reflect; and on all other people who stand in need of example; the necessity of obedience to human law; by openly manifested resignation to the will of Providence; who chastens and consoles; who bestows and takes away worldly wealth? I confess that; after passing through a period of sneering incredulity; I have come during my life here to recognize the value of the rites of religion and of religious observances in the family; and to discern the importance of household customs and domestic festivals。 The family will always be the basis of human society。 Law and authority are first felt there; there; at any rate; the habit of obedience should be learned。 Viewed in the light of all their consequences; the spirit of the family and paternal authority are two elements but little developed as yet in our new legislative system。 Yet in the family; the commune; the department; lies the whole of our country。 The laws ought therefore to be based on these three great divisions。

〃In my opinion; marriages; the birth of infants; and the deaths of heads of households cannot be surrounded with too much circumstance。 The secret of the strength of Catholicism; and of the deep root that it has taken in the ordinary life of man; lies precisely in thisthat it steps in to invest every important event in his existence with a pomp that is so naively touching; and so grand; whenever the priest rises to the height of his mission and brings his office into harmony with the sublimity of Christian doctrine。

〃Once I looked upon the Catholic religion as a cleverly exploited mass of prejudices and superstitions; which an intelligent civilization ought to deal with according to its desserts。 Here I have discovered its political necessity and its usefulness as a moral agent; here; moreover; I have come to understand its power; through a knowledge of the actual thing which the word expresses。 Religion means a bond or tie; and certainly a cultor; in other words; the outward and visible form of religion is the only force that can bind the various elements of society together and mould them into a permanent form。 Lastly; it was also here that I have felt the soothing influence that religion sheds over the wounds of humanity; and (without going further into the subject) I have seen how admirably it is suited to the fervid temperaments of southern races。

〃Let us take the road up the hillside;〃 said the doctor; interrupting himself; 〃we must reach the plateau up there。 Thence we sha
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