Read The Discovery of France Online
Authors: Graham Robb
link
botanizing tourists: Ferrand (1903), 109.
link
Bearnese pedlars in Spain: Hufton, 89.
link
pretend to be pilgrims: Babeau (1894), II, 103; Hufton, 125; cf. Manier, 35.
link
Deceit ... a speciality: Fontaine, 107; Hufton, 83–4; P. Roux, 211.
link
Smuggling . . . Nice: Pachoud, XLIII, 312.
link
Catalans and Roussillonnais: Hufton, 298–300.
link
pretending to be pregnant: McPhee (1992), 23.
link
More than twelve thousand: Hufton, 291.
link
‘Eggs, bacon, poultry’: Pinkney, 33.
link
‘
maisons de lait
’: Martin and Martenot, 489–90.
link
closer ties with Spain: Duroux; P. Girardin, 447; also A. Legoyt, in
Les Français, Province,
II, 214; Moch; Raison-Jourde (1976), 187–8.
link
‘improving an uncultivated corner’: Balzac, IX, 407.
link
‘And so, dear friend’: Fontaine, 26.
link
oil-, soap- and perfume factories: Audiganne, II, 242–3.
link
law on child labour (1840): e.g. Simon, 50; Bouvier, 56; A. Fremy, in
Les Français, Province,
I.
link
articles de Paris
: Larousse, VIII, 726.
link
‘He stopped in a little square’: Balzac, IV, 29–30.
link
insulated from the lands: Weber, 43.
link
Bureau of Wet-Nurses: Kock, I, 7–16; Sussman.
link
Saint-Oradoux: Clément, 7.
link
starving cobblers: Hufton, 97.
link
Poor regions like the Vercors: Planhol, 390–91.
link
apprentice’s Tour de France: Arnaud; Perdiguier (1854 and 1863); also Ménétra; Planhol, 288–89.
link
‘Route of the Tour de France’: Arnaud, 12–16.
link
laws and regulations: Malepeyre.
link
three out of every four Compagnons: Arnaud, 295.
link
the gruelling journey: Nadaud, 24–39; Tindall. Other details from Cavaillès, 161; Girault de Saint-Fargeau; Grandsire (1863); L. D. M.; Murray; Orlov, I, 24; Peuchet, ‘Creuse’, 23; Raison-Jourde (1976), 84–5; Sand (1844), 45; Sand (1856), VIII, 6.
link
peasant ... to Poitiers: Gazier, 1879, 70.
link
coucous
: Duckett, XVII, 405; Larousse, V, 290.
link
‘Encore un pour Sceaux!’: Jubinal, 317.
I
NTERLUDE
link
smuggler dogs of Peronne: Lavallée, V, ‘Somme’, 23–4; cf. V. Gaillard, in
Les Français, Province,
II, 58. The dogs were ‘bergers picards’, not directly related to the later breed of that name.
link
nail-makers’ dogs: Barberet, IV, 190; Rayeur (illust.); Barker (1893), 113–14; also in Jura: Lequinio, I, 275–6.
link
dog-carts:
MP
, 1908, p. 300; 1911, p. 167.
link
‘I celebrate those calamitous canines’: ‘Les Bons chiens’, Baudelaire (1975–76), I, 361.
link
Cows and horses lived next door: e.g. Huet de Coëtlizan, 409.
link
‘a very motley and promiscuous set’: Alison, II, 22; also Dumont (1890), 426.
link
fed until they died: Perrot, 529.
link
kiauler
,
tioler
: Rolland de Denus, 327 and 421; Sand (1846); Weber, 430–31.
link
animals conversed with humans: e.g. Webster (1901), 103.
link
The hunter would wrap himself: Dusaulx, II, 186–7; also Veryard, 111.
link
village school for bears: www.midi-pyrenees.biz/mp/ariege/ariege erce.htm
link
‘I have nothing’: Montaran, 237–8.
link
‘the purgatory of men’: Audiganne, II, 100–01.
link
dogs of Brittany and Maine: Hufton, 291–2.
link
Paris’s dog markets: Janin, 235–6.
link
percheron horses: Dumas (1847), 28.
link
Cossack horses: Peake (‘A Trip to Versailles’).
link
‘thirty-league beasts’: Anon. (1846), 47.
link
being kind to animals: e.g. Fréville.
link
Society for the Protection of Animals . . . Grammont Law: McPhee (1992), 256.
link
shooting dolphins: Busquet; Roberts, 45–6.
link
marmots pulled each other: Lavallée, II, ‘Drôme’, 25.
link
chamois and bouquetins: Chaix, 200 (quoting Abbé Albert).
link
‘Though the profit is small’: Saussure, II, 153.
link
‘We are living on bear and chamois’: Sand (1856), VIII, 131.
link
Russia and the Balkans: Planhol, 388.
link
young lynx near Luz: Dusaulx, II, 13–14; Saint-Amans (1789), 75; also Brehm, I, 302.
link
Eagle hunters: Ladoucette (1833), 33.
link
‘A peasant was holding it’: Chateaubriand, II, 14, 6.
link
flocks of doves: Weld (1859), 225–9.
link
public-information: Anon. (1851); also
MP
, 1883, p. 407 and 1887, p. 114.
link
stealing birds’ eggs: Anon. (1851);
MP
, 1862, p. 402; 1868, p. 366; 1884, p. 303.
link
berry bushes at the door: Mazon (1878), 192.
link
‘You may pass through the whole South’: Smollett, letter 20; also
MP
, 1868, p. 366.
link
Deforestation and hard winters: e.g. Crignelle, 225–37.
link
Normandy . . . inundated with wolves: Brehm, I, 482.
link
price on every wolf: Deferrière, 435 (report by Dupin, Préfet of Deux-Sèvres); Sonnini, 167.
link
a kind of addiction: Leschevin, 326–27; Saussure, II, 152.
link
his game-bag his ‘shroud’: Saussure, II, 151.
link
black Camargue bulls: Brehm, II, 665–6.
link
A horse . . . ‘Napoléon’: Brehm, II, 324;
MP
, 1841, pp. 250–51.
link
Barry . . . the Saint Bernard: Brehm, I, 406–7;
MP
, 1846, p. 200.
link
epidemic in 1820: Brehm, I, 404–6.
link
special railway carriages: McPhee (1992), 256.
link
Transhumance: F. Bernard; J.-E. Michel, 198–206; Peuchet, ‘Bouches-du-Rhône’, 10.
link
‘sheep in their thousands’: Pliny,
Natural
History
, XXI, xxxi, 57.
link
‘it is an honour to know’: Blackburn (1881), 239.
link
conical thatched hut: Baring-Gould (1894), 112 (drawing).
link
lone sheep: e.g. Maupassant (1884), 77.
link
sheep . . . form battle lines: Bourrit, 335.
link
‘a smile of life’: Mariéton, 401.
link
‘looking more like Arabs’: Sand (1856), VIII, 136.
link
‘The owner of this beautiful animal’: Dusaulx, I, 159–60.
link
knew exactly when to leave: Lequinio, I, 384–5; also Peuchet, ‘Jura’, 9; Legrand d’Aussy, 281; Mariéton, 401.
9. M
APS
link
evening of 10 August: Meridian expedition: accounts in Delambre and Méchain; researched and recounted by Alder.
link
Dammartin-en-Goële: Alder, 26–7.
link
Tuileries Palace: Alder, 21.
link
cranky measures: Burguburu; Peuchet,
passim
; etc.
link
‘a stone pyramid called the Meridian’: Alder, 109.
link
‘The instruments were laid out’: Delambre, I, 33–4.
link
‘demolished all those steeples’: Delambre, I, 73–4.
link
Bort-les-Orgues: Delambre, I, 80.
link
Puy Violent: Coudon.
link
attack of wild dogs: Alder, 241.
link
Cassini’s expedition: Cassini de Thury (1750 and 1754); G. de Fontanges; Gallois; Konvitz; Pelletier; Pelletier and Ozanne.
link
‘When one considers’: Cassini de Thury (1750), 9.
link
knowledge of cheese: Konvitz, 14.
link
army’s own geometers: Konvitz, 39 (in 1762).
link
government map:
Département du Mont Blanc
(
cy-devant Savoie
).
Décrété par la Convention Nationale le 27 novembre 1792
; Reverdy, 123.
link
‘He set up three stations’: Pelletier, 97–100.
link
Many local names: Ronjat; Whymper, 21.
link
‘Names had to be given’: Cassini de Thury (1750), 10.
link
a camera lucida: Mérimée (1941–64), I, 309–10.
link
‘Several Bretons seated’: Bray, 225; see also Brune, 149.
link
Saint-Martin-de-Carnac: Cazals, 162; Dainville, 134.
link
map of the Moon: Launay. However, paths around the family château at Thury-en-Valois are picked out in green and seem to form a masonic symbol.
link
Loiseleur-Deslongchamps: Cosson; Delambre, I, 305; etc.
link
looked like Joan of Arc: Monteil, I, 149.
link
last year’s chestnuts: Monteil, II, 37.
10. E
MPIRE
link
‘In the Ardennes’: Wairy, 148–50; see also Argenson, 198 (Marie Leczinska in 1725); Beauchamp, I, 181 (Napoleon to Montier-en- Der).
link
‘Having no paths to follow’: Thiébault, II, 11–13.
link
‘changed with the seasons’: Pelletier, 108. The first road maps date from the early eighteenth century: Arbellot (1992), 775; Konvitz, 114; Reverdy, 7.
link
‘Grand Chemin de France’: e.g. Fodéré, I, 158.
link
‘nations have great men’: Baudelaire (1975–76), I, 654.
link
most maps for travellers: e.g. Coutans; Ogée.
link
Aubervilliers: Coutans.
link
‘I have often heard tell’: Mérimée (1941–64), I, 288–9 (2 July 1834).
link
places . . . close together: Dupain-Triel, 3–4; Peuchet, ‘Hautes-Alpes’, 16.
link
could be folded up: Pacha, 37.
link
‘I took the diligence to Soissons’: V. Hugo, ‘Voyages’, p. 32.
link
memorizes the Cassini map: Sand (1872), 122.
link
signs of map mania: Anon. (1855); Anon. (1856).
link
‘At a bend in the road’: M. Proust, I, 177–8.
link
Pyrame de Candolle: C. Malte-Brun (1810), 240; also Bentham’s expeditions in 1820 and 1825.
link
Charles de Tourtoulon: Plazanet.
link
Carte de l’état-major
: Coraboeuf; G. de Fontanges; V.-A. Malte-Brun (1858 and 1868).
link
‘Always on foot’: Anon (1843), 206; also Anon. (Nov. 1835); P. Buache,
Carte minéralogique
(1746);
Tableau d’assemblage des six feuilles de la Carte géologique.
link
‘broad, continuous bands’: Anon. (1843), 27–8.
link
‘limits of these natural regions’: Anon. (1843), 208.
link
lacked basic information: Ardouin-Dumazet (1882); Josse, 471; Webster (1901), 343.
link
‘five mountain ranges’: Stendhal, 60.
link
M. Sanis: Barbié du Bocage.
link
relief models of the Alps: e.g. H. d’Angeville, 7–8.
link
geodesic survey: Bourdiol.
link
Bordeaux Geographical Society: Ardouin-Dumazet (1882), 103–4.
11. T
RAVELLING IN
F
RANCE
, I
link
high-speed goods: Cavaillès, 245.
link
load pulled by one horse: Price, 270.
link
wooden planks: Duby, III, 183.
link
the
corvée:
Babeau (1878), 236–8; Cavaillès, 87–96; Flour de Saint-Genis, 11; Martin and Martenot, 415–16; Robillard de Beaurepaire, 24–5; Sonnini, 79–80; Vignon, 14–24.
link
‘Thus, whenever M. le Marquis’: Cooper, 313–14.
link
châteaux of the Loire Valley: Hufton, 189–90 and n. 3.
link
undercut the local farmers: Cavaillès, 120; also the Cahier de Doléances of Maron, Meurthe-et-Moselle, no. 23.
link
vigorous lobbying: Peuchet, ‘Creuse’, 38.
link
innovation of . . . Trésaguet: Cavaillès, 90.
link
Most French roads: Robillard de Beaurepaire, 14.
link
‘Setting aside the depths’: Durand-Claye, 90.
link
Généralité of Rouen: Robillard de Beaurepaire, 14.
link
‘In travelling to the point’: Cavaillès, 282.
link
sandstone slabs: Marlin, I, 274.
link
The richer the soil: e.g. Duchesne (1762), 208; Pradt, 106–7.
link
statue of Louis XIV: Goubert, 90.
link
Baron Haussmann: Haussmann, 52 (Poitiers); 67–71 (Yssingeaux); 90–91 (Nérac). 221
link
‘Couldn’t I be sent’: Haussmann, 91.
link
Roman roads had been marked: e.g. G. Delisle.
link
‘moderate-sized colony of moles’: Mirabeau, 183.
link
stretches of Roman surface: Lavallée, ‘Bouches-du-Rhône’, 10 (Arles); Legrand d’Aussy, 36–37 (Clermont); Saint-Amans (1812), 214 (Arcachon); Bizeul (Saintes), 259; Saint-Amans (1799), 22 (Aiguillon); Grad, 614–15 and Reinhard (Sainte-Odile); Jourdain, 191 and Mérimée (1941–64), II, 253 (Chalindrey); Peuchet, ‘Deux-Sèvres’, 36; Abgrall (Quimper). 222
link
‘the avenues of the city of Paris’: Cavaillès, 57.
link
‘consider the main route’: Cavaillès, 54 and 58.
link
a person in Moulins: Weld (1850), 54.
link
edict of 1607: H. Gautier, 194; also Assemblée Nationale, II, 7.
link
travelled with his own crew: Goubert, 90.
link
crosses, posts or pyramids: H. Gautier, 194; Veuclin. 223
link
Orry and . . . Trudaine: Arbellot (1973), 766–9.
link
lined with trees: Lecreulx, 8–10; Marlin, II, 135.
link
branches of apple trees: Duchesne (1762), 208.