<h2>NOTRE DAME DES EAUX.</h2>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><big>Notre Dame des Eaux.</big></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">West</span> of St. Pol de Leon, on the sea-cliffs of
Finisterre, stands the ancient church of Notre
Dame des Eaux. Five centuries of beating
winds and sweeping rains have moulded its
angles, and worn its carvings and sculpture
down to the very semblance of the ragged cliffs
themselves, until even the Breton fisherman,
looking lovingly from his boat as he makes for
the harbor of Morlaix, hardly can say where
the crags end, and where the church begins.
The teeth of the winds of the sea have devoured,
bit by bit, the fine sculpture of the
doorway and the thin cusps of the window
tracery; gray moss creeps caressingly over the
worn walls in ineffectual protection; gentle
vines, turned crabbed by the harsh beating of
the fierce winds, clutch the crumbling buttresses,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
climb up over the sinking roof, reach
in even at the louvres of the belfry, holding the
little sanctuary safe in desperate arms against
the savage warfare of the sea and sky.</p>
<p>Many a time you may follow the rocky highway
from St. Pol even around the last land of
France, and so to Brest, yet never see sign of
Notre Dame des Eaux; for it clings to a cliff
somewhat lower than the road, and between
grows a stunted thicket of harsh and ragged
trees, their skeleton white branches, tortured
and contorted, thrusting sorrowfully out of the
hard, dark foliage that still grows below, where
the rise of land below the highway gives some
protection. You must leave the wood by the
two cottages of yellow stone, about twenty
miles beyond St. Pol, and go down to the right,
around the old stone quarry; then, bearing to
the left by the little cliff path, you will, in a
moment, see the pointed roof of the tower of
Notre Dame, and, later, come down to the side
porch among the crosses of the arid little graveyard.</p>
<p>It is worth the walk, for though the church
has outwardly little but its sad picturesqueness
to repay the artist, within it is a dream and a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
delight. A Norman nave of round, red stone
piers and arches, a delicate choir of the richest
flamboyant, a High Altar of the time of Francis
I., form only the mellow background and frame
for carven tombs and dark old pictures, hanging
lamps of iron and brass, and black, heavily
carved choir-stalls of the Renaissance.</p>
<p>So has the little church lain unnoticed for
many centuries; for the horrors and follies of
the Revolution have never come near, and the
hardy and faithful people of Finisterre have
feared God and loved Our Lady too well to harm
her church. For many years it was the church
of the Comtes de Jarleuc; and these are their
tombs that mellow year by year under the warm
light of the painted windows, given long ago
by Comte Robert de Jarleuc, when the heir
of Poullaouen came safely to shore in the harbor
of Morlaix, having escaped from the Isle
of Wight, where he had lain captive after the
awful defeat of the fleet of Charles of Valois
at Sluys. And now the heir of Poullaouen lies
in a carven tomb, forgetful of the world where
he fought so nobly: the dynasty he fought to
establish, only a memory; the family he made
glorious, a name; the Château Poullaouen a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
single crag of riven masonry in the fields of
M. du Bois, mayor of Morlaix.</p>
<p>It was Julien, Comte de Bergerac, who rediscovered
Notre Dame des Eaux, and by his picture
of its dreamy interior in the Salon of '86
brought once more into notice this forgotten
corner of the world. The next year a party of
painters settled themselves near by, roughing it
as best they could, and in the year following,
Mme. de Bergerac and her daughter Héloïse
came with Julien, and, buying the old farm of
Pontivy, on the highway over Notre Dame,
turned it into a summer house that almost
made amends for their lost château on the
Dordogne, stolen from them as virulent Royalists
by the triumphant Republic in 1794.</p>
<p>Little by little a summer colony of painters
gathered around Pontivy, and it was not until
the spring of 1890 that the peace of the colony
was broken. It was a sorrowful tragedy. Jean
d'Yriex, the youngest and merriest devil of all the
jolly crew, became suddenly moody and morose.
At first this was attributed to his undisguised
admiration for Mlle. Héloïse, and was looked
on as one of the vagaries of boyish passion; but
one day, while riding with M. de Bergerac, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
suddenly seized the bridle of Julien's horse,
wrenched it from his hand, and, turning his
own horse's head towards the cliffs, lashed the
terrified animals into a gallop straight towards
the brink. He was only thwarted in his mad
object by Julien, who with a quick blow sent
him headlong in the dry grass, and reined in
the terrified animals hardly a yard from the
cliffs. When this happened, and no word of explanation
was granted, only a sullen silence that
lasted for days, it became clear that poor Jean's
brain was wrong in some way. Héloïse devoted
herself to him with infinite patience,—though she
felt no special affection for him, only pity,—and
while he was with her he seemed sane and
quiet. But at night some strange mania took
possession of him. If he had worked on his
Prix de Rome picture in the daytime, while
Héloïse sat by him, reading aloud or singing a
little, no matter how good the work, it would
have vanished in the morning, and he would
again begin, only to erase his labor during
the night.</p>
<p>At last his growing insanity reached its
climax; and one day in Notre Dame, when he
had painted better than usual, he suddenly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
stopped, seized a palette knife, and slashed the
great canvas in strips. Héloïse sprang forward
to stop him, and in crazy fury he turned on her,
striking at her throat with the palette knife.
The thin steel snapped, and the white throat
showed only a scarlet scratch. Héloïse, without
that ordinary terror that would crush most
women, grasped the thin wrists of the madman,
and, though he could easily have wrenched his
hands away, d'Yriex sank on his knees in a
passion of tears. He shut himself in his room
at Pontivy, refusing to see any one, walking for
hours up and down, fighting against growing
madness. Soon Dr. Charpentier came from
Paris, summoned by Mme. de Bergerac; and
after one short, forced interview, left at once
for Paris, taking M. d'Yriex with him.</p>
<p>A few days later came a letter for Mme. de
Bergerac, in which Dr. Charpentier confessed
that Jean had disappeared, that he had allowed
him too much liberty, owing to his apparent
calmness, and that when the train stopped at
Le Mans he had slipped from him and utterly
vanished.</p>
<p>During the summer, word came occasionally
that no trace had been found of the unhappy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
man, and at last the Pontivy colony realized that
the merry boy was dead. Had he lived he
<i>must</i> have been found, for the exertions of the
police were perfect; yet not the slightest trace
was discovered, and his lamentable death was
acknowledged, not only by Mme. de Bergerac
and Jean's family,—sorrowing for the death
of their first-born, away in the warm hills of
Lozère,—but by Dr. Charpentier as well.</p>
<p>So the summer passed, and the autumn came,
and at last the cold rains of November—the
skirmish line of the advancing army of winter—drove
the colony back to Paris.</p>
<p>It was the last day at Pontivy, and Mlle.
Héloïse had come down to Notre Dame for a
last look at the beautiful shrine, a last prayer
for the repose of the tortured soul of poor Jean
d'Yriex. The rains had ceased for a time, and
a warm stillness lay over the cliffs and on the
creeping sea, swaying and lapping around the
ragged shore. Héloïse knelt very long before
the Altar of Our Lady of the Waters; and when
she finally rose, could not bring herself to leave
as yet that place of sorrowful beauty, all warm
and golden with the last light of the declining
sun. She watched the old verger, Pierre Polou,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
stumping softly around the darkening building,
and spoke to him once, asking the hour;
but he was very deaf, as well as nearly blind,
and he did not answer.</p>
<p>So she sat in the corner of the aisle by the
Altar of Our Lady of the Waters, watching the
checkered light fade in the advancing shadows,
dreaming sad day-dreams of the dead summer,
until the day-dreams merged in night-dreams,
and she fell asleep.</p>
<p>Then the last light of the early sunset died
in the gleaming quarries of the west window;
Pierre Polou stumbled uncertainly through the
dusky shadow, locked the sagging doors of the
mouldering south porch, and took his way
among the leaning crosses up to the highway
and his little cottage, a good mile away,—the
nearest house to the lonely Church of Notre
Dame des Eaux.</p>
<p>With the setting of the sun great clouds rose
swiftly from the sea; the wind freshened, and
the gaunt branches of the weather-worn trees
in the churchyard lashed themselves beseechingly
before the coming storm. The tide turned,
and the waters at the foot of the rocks swept
uneasily up the narrow beach and caught at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
weary cliffs, their sobbing growing and deepening
to a threatening, solemn roar. Whirls of
dead leaves rose in the churchyard, and threw
themselves against the blank windows. The
winter and the night came down together.</p>
<p>Héloïse awoke, bewildered and wondering;
in a moment she realized the situation, and without
fear or uneasiness. There was nothing to
dread in Notre Dame by night; the ghosts, if
there were ghosts, would not trouble her, and
the doors were securely locked. It was foolish
of her to fall asleep, and her mother would be
most uneasy at Pontivy if she realized before
dawn that Héloïse had not returned. On the
other hand, she was in the habit of wandering
off to walk after dinner, often not coming home
until late, so it was quite possible that she
might return before Madame knew of her
absence, for Polou came always to unlock the
church for the low mass at six o'clock; so she
arose from her cramped position in the aisle,
and walked slowly up to the choir-rail, entered
the chancel, and felt her way to one of the
stalls, on the south side, where there were
cushions and an easy back.</p>
<p>It was really very beautiful in Notre Dame<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
by night; she had never suspected how strange
and solemn the little church could be when the
moon shone fitfully through the south windows,
now bright and clear, now blotted out by sweeping
clouds. The nave was barred with the long
shadows of the heavy pillars, and when the
moon came out she could see far down almost
to the west end. How still it was! Only a
soft low murmur without of the restless limbs
of the trees, and of the creeping sea.</p>
<p>It was very soothing, almost like a song; and
Héloïse felt sleep coming back to her as the
clouds shut out the moon, and all the church
grew black.</p>
<p>She was drifting off into the last delicious
moment of vanishing consciousness, when she
suddenly came fully awake, with a shock that
made every nerve tingle. In the midst of the
far faint sounds of the tempestuous night she
had heard a footstep! Yet the church was
utterly empty, she was sure. And again! A
footstep dragging and uncertain, stealthy and
cautious, but an unmistakable step, away in
the blackest shadow at the end of the church.</p>
<p>She sat up, frozen with the fear that comes
at night and that is overwhelming, her hands<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
clutching the coarse carving of the arms of the
stall, staring down into the dark.</p>
<p>Again the footstep, and again,—slow, measured,
one after another at intervals of perhaps
half a minute, growing a little louder each time,
a little nearer.</p>
<p>Would the darkness never be broken?
Would the cloud never pass? Minute after
minute went like weary hours, and still the
moon was hid, still the dead branches rattled
clatteringly on the high windows. Unconsciously
she moved, as under a magician's spell,
down to the choir-rail, straining her eyes to
pierce the thick night. And the step, it was
very near! Ah, the moon at last! A white ray
fell through the westernmost window, painting
a bar of light on the floor of sagging stone.
Then a second bar, then a third, and a fourth,
and for a moment Héloïse could have cried out
with relief, for nothing broke the lines of light,—no
figure, no shadow. In another moment came
a step, and from the shadow of the last column
appeared in the pallid moonlight the figure of a
man. The girl stared breathless, the moonlight
falling on her as she stood rigid against
the low parapet. Another step and another,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
and she saw before her—was it ghost or living
man?—a white mad face staring from matted
hair and beard, a tall thin figure half clothed in
rags, limping as it stepped towards her with
wounded feet. From the dead face stared mad
eyes that gleamed like the eyes of a cat, fixed
on hers with insane persistence, holding her,
fascinating her as a cat fascinates a bird.</p>
<p>One more step,—it was close before her now!
those awful, luminous eyes dilating and contracting
in awful palpitations. And the moon was
going out; the shadows swept one by one over the
windows; she stared at the moonlit face for a last
fascinated glance—Mother of God! it was—— The
shadow swept over them, and now only remained
the blazing eyes and the dim outline of
a form that crouched waveringly before her as
a cat crouches, drawing its vibrating body together
for the spring that blots out the life of
the victim.</p>
<p>In another instant the mad thing would leap;
but just as the quiver swept over the crouching
body, Héloïse gathered all her strength into one
action of desperate terror.</p>
<p>"Jean, stop!"</p>
<p>The thing crouched before her paused, chattering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
softly to itself; then it articulated dryly,
and with all the trouble of a learning child,
the one word, "<i>Chantez!</i>"</p>
<p>Without a thought, Héloïse sang; it was the
first thing that she remembered, an old Provençal
song that d'Yriex had always loved. While
she sang, the poor mad creature lay huddled at
her feet, separated from her only by the choir
parapet, its dilating, contracting eyes never moving
for an instant. As the song died away, came
again that awful tremor, indicative of the coming
death-spring, and again she sang,—this time
the old <i>Pange lingua</i>, its sonorous Latin sounding
in the deserted church like the voice of dead
centuries.</p>
<p>And so she sang, on and on, hour after hour,—hymns
and <i>chansons</i>, folk-songs and bits from
comic operas, songs of the boulevards alternating
with the <i>Tantum ergo</i> and the <i>O Filii et
Filiæ</i>. It mattered little what she sang. At
last it seemed to her that it mattered little
whether she sang or no; for her brain whirled
round and round like a dizzy maelstrom, her
icy hands, griping the hard rail, alone supported
her dying body. She could hear no sound of her
song; her body was numb, her mouth parched,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
her lips cracked and bleeding; she felt the drops
of blood fall from her chin. And still she sang,
with the yellow palpitating eyes holding her as
in a vice. If only she could continue until dawn!
It must be dawn so soon! The windows were
growing gray, the rain lashed outside, she
could distinguish the features of the horror
before her; but the night of death was growing
with the coming day, blackness swept down
upon her; she could sing no more, her tortured
lips made one last effort to form the
words, "Mother of God, save me!" and night
and death came down like a crushing wave.</p>
<p>But her prayer was heard; the dawn had
come, and Polou unlocked the porch-door for
Father Augustin just in time to hear the last
agonized cry. The maniac turned in the very
act of leaping on his victim, and sprang for
the two men, who stopped in dumb amazement.
Poor old Pierre Polou went down at a
blow; but Father Augustin was young and
fearless, and he grappled the mad animal with all
his strength and will. It would have gone ill
even with him,—for no one can stand against
the bestial fury of a man in whom reason is
dead,—had not some sudden impulse seized the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
maniac, who pitched the priest aside with a
single movement, and, leaping through the door,
vanished forever.</p>
<p>Did he hurl himself from the cliffs in the
cold wet morning, or was he doomed to wander,
a wild beast, until, captured, he beat himself
in vain against the walls of some asylum, an unknown
pauper lunatic? None ever knew.</p>
<p>The colony at Pontivy was blotted out by
the dreary tragedy, and Notre Dame des Eaux
sank once more into silence and solitude. Once
a year Father Augustin said mass for the repose
of the soul of Jean d'Yriex; but no other memory
remained of the horror that blighted the lives of
an innocent girl and of a gray-haired mother
mourning for her dead boy in far Lozère.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span></p>
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