"You ought to buy it," said my host; "it's just the place for a
solitary-minded devil like you. And it would be rather worth while to
own the most romantic house in Brittany. The present people are dead
broke, and it's going for a song -- you ought to buy it."
It was not with the least idea of living up to the character my
friend Lanrivain ascribed to me (as a matter of fact, under my
unsociable exterior I have always had secret yearnings for domesticity)
that I took his hint one autumn afternoon and went to Kerfol. My friend
was motoring over to Quimper on business: he dropped me on the way, at a
cross-road on a heath, and said: "First turn to the right and second to
the left. Then straight ahead till you see an avenue. If you meet any
peasants, don't ask your way. They don't understand French, and they
would pretend they did and mix you up. I'll be back for you here by
sunset -- and don't forget the tombs in the chapel."
I followed Lanrivain's directions with the hesitation occasioned by
the usual difficulty of remembering whether he had said the first turn
to the right and second to the left, or the contrary. If I had met a
peasant I should certainly have asked, and probably been sent astray;
but I had the desert landscape to myself, and so stumbled on the right
turn and walked on across the heath till I came to an avenue. It was so
unlike any other avenue I have ever seen that I instantly knew it must
be THE avenue. The grey-trunked trees sprang up straight to a great
height and then interwove their pale-grey branches in a long tunnel
through which the autumn light fell faintly. I know most trees by name,
but I haven't to this day been able to decide what those trees were.
They had the tall curve of elms, the tenuity of poplars, the ashen
colour of olives under a rainy sky; and they stretched ahead of me for
half a mile or more without a break in their arch. If ever I saw an
avenue that unmistakeably led to something, it was the avenue at Kerfol.
My heart beat a little as I began to walk down it.
Presently the trees ended and I came to a fortified gate in a long
wall. Between me and the wall was an open space of grass, with other
grey avenues radiating from it. Behind the wall were tall slate roofs
mossed with silver, a chapel belfry, the top of a keep. A moat filled
with wild shrubs and brambles surrounded the place; the drawbridge had
been replaced by a stone arch, and the portcullis by an iron gate. I
stood for a long time on the hither side of the moat, gazing about me,
and letting the influence of the place sink in. I said to myself: "If I
wait long enough, the guardian will turn up and show me the tombs --"
and I rather hoped he wouldn't turn up too soon.
I sat down on a stone and lit a cigarette. As soon as I had done
it, it struck me as a puerile and portentous thing to do, with that
great blind house looking down at me, and all the empty avenues
converging on me. It may have been the depth of the silence that made me
so conscious of my gesture. The squeak of my match sounded as loud as
the scraping of a brake, and I almost fancied I heard it fall when I
tossed it onto the grass. But there was more than that: a sense of
irrelevance, of littleness, of childish bravado, in sitting there
puffing my cigarette-smoke into the face of such a past.
I knew nothing of the history of Kerfol -- I was new to Brittany,
and Lanrivain had never mentioned the name to me till the day before --
but one couldn't as much as glance at that pile without feeling in it a
long accumulation of history. What kind of history I was not prepared to
guess: perhaps only the sheer weight of many associated lives and deaths
which gives a kind of majesty to all old houses. But the aspect of
Kerfol suggested something more -- a perspective of stern and cruel
memories stretching away, like its own grey avenues, into a blur of
darkness.
Certainly no house had ever more completely and finally broken with
the present. As it stood there, lifting its proud roofs and gables to
the sky, it might have been its own funeral monument. "Tombs in the
chapel? The whole place is a tomb!" I reflected. I hoped more and more
that the guardian would not come. The details of the place, however
striking, would seem trivial compared with its collective
impressiveness; and I wanted only to sit there and be penetrated by the
weight of its silence.
"It's the very place for you!" Lanrivain had said; and I was
overcome by the almost blasphemous frivolity of suggesting to any living
being that Kerfol was the place for him. "Is it possible that any one
could NOT see -- ?" I wondered. I did not finish the thought: what I
meant was undefinable. I stood up and wandered toward the gate. I was
beginning to want to know more; not to SEE more -- I was by now so sure
it was not a question of seeing -- but to feel more: feel all the place
had to communicate. "But to get in one will have to rout out the
keeper," I thought reluctantly, and hesitated. Finally I crossed the
bridge and tried the iron gate. It yielded, and I walked under the
tunnel formed by the thickness of the chemin de ronde. At the farther
end, a wooden barricade had been laid across the entrance, and beyond it
I saw a court enclosed in noble architecture. The main building faced
me; and I now discovered that one half was a mere ruined front, with
gaping windows through which the wild growths of the moat and the trees
of the park were visible. The rest of the house was still in its robust
beauty. One end abutted on the round tower, the other on the small
traceried chapel, and in an angle of the building stood a graceful
well-head adorned with mossy urns. A few roses grew against the walls,
and on an upper window-sill I remember noticing a pot of fuchsias.
My sense of the pressure of the invisible began to yield to my
architectural interest. The building was so fine that I felt a desire to
explore it for its own sake. I looked about the court, wondering in
which corner the guardian lodged. Then I pushed open the barrier and
went in. As I did so, a little dog barred my way. He was such a
remarkably beautiful little dog that for a moment he made me forget the
splendid place he was defending. I was not sure of his breed at the
time, but have since learned that it was Chinese, and that he was of a
rare variety called the "Sleeve-dog." He was very small and golden
brown, with large brown eyes and a ruffled throat: he looked rather like
a large tawny chrysanthemum. I said to myself: "These little beasts
always snap and scream, and somebody will be out in a minute."
The little animal stood before me, forbidding, almost menacing:
there was anger in his large brown eyes. But he made no sound, he came
no nearer. Instead, as I advanced, he gradually fell back, and I noticed
that another dog, a vague rough brindled thing, had limped up. "There'll
be a hubbub now," I thought; for at the same moment a third dog, a
long-haired white mongrel, slipped out of a doorway and joined the
others. All three stood looking at me with grave eyes; but not a sound
came from them. As I advanced they continued to fall back on muffled
paws, still watching me. "At a given point, they'll all charge at my
ankles: it's one of the dodges that dogs who live together put up on
one," I thought. I was not much alarmed, for they were neither large nor
formidable. But they let me wander about the court as I pleased,
following me at a little distance -- always the same distance -- and
always keeping their eyes on me. Presently I looked across at the ruined
facade, and saw that in one of its window-frames another dog stood: a
large white pointer with one brown ear. He was an old grave dog, much
more experienced than the others; and he seemed to be observing me with
a deeper intentness.
"I'll hear from HIM," I said to myself; but he stood in the empty
window-frame, against the trees of the park, and continued to watch me
without moving. I looked back at him for a time, to see if the sense
that he was being watched would not rouse him. Half the width of the
court lay between us, and we stared at each other silently across it.
But he did not stir, and at last I turned away. Behind me I found the
rest of the pack, with a newcomer added: a small black greyhound with
pale agate-coloured eyes. He was shivering a little, and his expression
was more timid than that of the others. I noticed that he kept a little
behind them. And still there was not a sound.
I stood there for fully five minutes, the circle about me --
waiting, as they seemed to be waiting. At last I went up to the little
golden-brown dog and stooped to pat him. As I did so, I heard myself
laugh. The little dog did not start, or growl, or take his eyes from me
-- he simply slipped back about a yard, and then paused and continued to
look at me. "Oh, hang it!" I exclaimed aloud, and walked across the
court toward the well.
As I advanced, the dogs separated and slid away into different
corners of the court. I examined the urns on the well, tried a locked
door or two, and up and down the dumb facade; then I faced about toward
the chapel. When I turned I perceived that all the dogs had disappeared
except the old pointer, who still watched me from the empty
window-frame. It was rather a relief to be rid of that cloud of
witnesses; and I began to look about me for a way to the back of the
house. "Perhaps there'll be somebody in the garden," I thought. I found
a way across the moat, scrambled over a wall smothered in brambles, and
got into the garden. A few lean hydrangeas and geraniums pined in the
flower-beds, and the ancient house looked down on them indifferently.
Its garden side was plainer and severer than the other: the long granite
front, with its few windows and steep roof, looked like a
fortress-prison. I walked around the farther wing, went up some
disjointed steps, and entered the deep twilight of a narrow and
incredibly old box-walk. The walk was just wide enough for one person to
slip through, and its branches met overhead. It was like the ghost of a
box-walk, its lustrous green all turning to the shadowy greyness of the
avenues. I walked on and on, the branches hitting me in the face and
springing back with a dry rattle; and at length I came out on the grassy
top of the chemin de ronde. I walked along it to the gate-tower, looking
down into the court, which was just below me. Not a human being was in
sight; and neither were the dogs. I found a flight of steps in the
thickness of the wall and went down them; and when I emerged again into
the court, there stood the circle of dogs, the golden- brown one a
little ahead of the others, the black greyhound shivering in the rear.
"Oh, hang it -- you uncomfortable beasts, you!" I exclaimed, my
voice startling me with a sudden echo. The dogs stood motionless,
watching me. I knew by this time that they would not try to prevent my
approaching the house, and the knowledge left me free to examine them. I
had a feeling that they must be horribly cowed to be so silent and
inert. Yet they did not look hungry or ill-treated. Their coats were
smooth and they were not thin, except the shivering greyhound. It was
more as if they had lived a long time with people who never spoke to
them or looked at them: as though the silence of the place had gradually
benumbed their busy inquisitive natures. And this strange passivity,
this almost human lassitude, seemed to me sadder than the misery of
starved and beaten animals. I should have liked to rouse them for a
minute, to coax them into a game or a scamper; but the longer I looked
into their fixed and weary eyes the more preposterous the idea became.
With the windows of that house looking down on us, how could I have
imagined such a thing? The dogs knew better: THEY knew what the house
would tolerate and what it would not. I even fancied that they knew what
was passing through my mind, and pitied me for my frivolity. But even
that feeling probably reached them through a thick fog of listlessness.
I had an idea that their distance from me was as nothing to my
remoteness from them. In the last analysis, the impression they produced
was that of having in common one memory so deep and dark that nothing
that had happened since was worth either a growl or a wag.
"I say," I broke out abruptly, addressing myself to the dumb
circle, "do you know what you look like, the whole lot of you? You look
as if you'd seen a ghost -- that's how you look! I wonder if there IS a
ghost here, and nobody but you left for it to appear to?" The dogs
continued to gaze at me without moving. . .
It was dark when I saw Lanrivain's motor lamps at the cross- roads
-- and I wasn't exactly sorry to see them. I had the sense of having
escaped from the loneliest place in the whole world, and of not liking
loneliness -- to that degree -- as much as I had imagined I should. My
friend had brought his solicitor back from Quimper for the night, and
seated beside a fat and affable stranger I felt no inclination to talk
of Kerfol. . .
But that evening, when Lanrivain and the solicitor were closeted in
the study, Madame de Lanrivain began to question me in the drawing-room.
"Well -- are you going to buy Kerfol?" she asked, tilting up her
gay chin from her embroidery.
"I haven't decided yet. The fact is, I couldn't get into the
house," I said, as if I had simply postponed my decision, and meant to
go back for another look.
"You couldn't get in? Why, what happened? The family are mad to
sell the place, and the old guardian has orders --"
"I'd quite forgotten -- and so had Herve, I'm sure. If we'd
remembered, we never should have sent you today -- but then, after all,
one doesn't half believe that sort of thing, does one?"
"What sort of thing?" I asked, involuntarily sinking my voice to
the level of hers. Inwardly I was thinking: "I KNEW there was something.
. ."
Madame de Lanrivain cleared her throat and produced a reassuring
smile. "Didn't Herve tell you the story of Kerfol? An ancestor of his
was mixed up in it. You know every Breton house has its ghost-story; and
some of them are rather unpleasant."
"Well, those dogs are the ghosts of Kerfol. At least, the peasants
say there's one day in the year when a lot of dogs appear there; and
that day the keeper and his daughter go off to Morlaix and get drunk.
The women in Brittany drink dreadfully." She stooped to match a silk;
then she lifted her charming inquisitive Parisian face: "Did you REALLY
see a lot of dogs? There isn't one at Kerfol," she said.
Lanrivain, the next day, hunted out a shabby calf volume from the back
of an upper shelf of his library.
"Yes -- here it is. What does it call itself? A History of the
Assizes of the Duchy of Brittany. Quimper, 1702. The book was written
about a hundred years later than the Kerfol affair; but I believe the
account is transcribed pretty literally from the judicial records.
Anyhow, it's queer reading. And there's a Herve de Lanrivain mixed up in
it -- not exactly MY style, as you'll see. But then he's only a
collateral. Here, take the book up to bed with you. I don't exactly
remember the details; but after you've read it I'll bet anything you'll
leave your light burning all night!"
I left my light burning all night, as he had predicted; but it was
chiefly because, till near dawn, I was absorbed in my reading. The
account of the trial of Anne de Cornault, wife of the lord of Kerfol,
was long and closely printed. It was, as my friend had said, probably an
almost literal transcription of what took place in the court-room; and
the trial lasted nearly a month. Besides, the type of the book was
detestable. . .
At first I thought of translating the old record literally. But it
is full of wearisome repetitions, and the main lines of the story are
forever straying off into side issues. So I have tried to disentangle
it, and give it here in a simpler form. At times, however, I have
reverted to the text because no other words could have conveyed so
exactly the sense of what I felt at Kerfol; and nowhere have I added
anything of my own.
It was in the year 16 -- that Yves de Cornault, lord of the domain of
Kerfol, went to the pardon of Locronan to perform his religious duties.
He was a rich and powerful noble, then in his sixty-second year, but
hale and sturdy, a great horseman and hunter and a pious man. So all his
neighbours attested. In appearance he seems to have been short and
broad, with a swarthy face, legs slightly bowed from the saddle, a
hanging nose and broad hands with black hairs on them. He had married
young and lost his wife and son soon after, and since then had lived
alone at Kerfol. Twice a year he went to Morlaix, where he had a
handsome house by the river, and spent a week or ten days there; and
occasionally he rode to Rennes on business. Witnesses were found to
declare that during these absences he led a life different from the one
he was known to lead at Kerfol, where he busied himself with his estate,
attended mass daily, and found his only amusement in hunting the wild
boar and water-fowl. But these rumours are not particularly relevant,
and it is certain that among people of his own class in the
neighbourhood he passed for a stern and even austere man, observant of
his religious obligations, and keeping strictly to himself. There was no
talk of any familiarity with the women on his estate, though at that
time the nobility were very free with their peasants. Some people said
he had never looked at a woman since his wife's death; but such things
are hard to prove, and the evidence on this point was not worth much.
Well, in his sixty-second year, Yves de Cornault went to the pardon
at Locronan, and saw there a young lady of Douarnenez, who had ridden
over pillion behind her father to do her duty to the saint. Her name was
Anne de Barrigan, and she came of good old Breton stock, but much less
great and powerful than that of Yves de Cornault; and her father had
squandered his fortune at cards, and lived almost like a peasant in his
little granite manor on the moors. . . I have said I would add nothing
of my own to this bald statement of a strange case; but I must interrupt
myself here to describe the young lady who rode up to the lych-gate of
Locronan at the very moment when the Baron de Cornault was also
dismounting there. I take my description from a rather rare thing: a
faded drawing in red crayon, sober and truthful enough to be by a late
pupil of the Clouets, which hangs in Lanrivain's study, and is said to
be a portrait of Anne de Barrigan. It is unsigned and has no mark of
identity but the initials A. B., and the date 16 -- , the year after her
marriage. It represents a young woman with a small oval face, almost
pointed, yet wide enough for a full mouth with a tender depression at
the corners. The nose is small, and the eyebrows are set rather high,
far apart, and as lightly pencilled as the eyebrows in a Chinese
painting. The forehead is high and serious, and the hair, which one
feels to be fine and thick and fair, drawn off it and lying close like a
cap. The eyes are neither large nor small, hazel probably, with a look
at once shy and steady. A pair of beautiful long hands are crossed below
the lady's breast. . .
The chaplain of Kerfol, and other witnesses, averred that when the
Baron came back from Locronan he jumped from his horse, ordered another
to be instantly saddled, called to a young page come with him, and rode
away that same evening to the south. His steward followed the next
morning with coffers laden on a pair of pack mules. The following week
Yves de Cornault rode back to Kerfol, sent for his vassals and tenants,
and told them he was to be married at All Saints to Anne de Barrigan of
Douarnenez. And on All Saints' Day the marriage took place.
As to the next few years, the evidence on both sides seems to show
that they passed happily for the couple. No one was found to say that
Yves de Cornault had been unkind to his wife, and it was plain to all
that he was content with his bargain. Indeed, it was admitted by the
chaplain and other witnesses for the prosecution that the young lady had
a softening influence on her husband, and that he became less exacting
with his tenants, less harsh to peasants and dependents, and less
subject to the fits of gloomy silence which had darkened his widow-hood.
As to his wife, the only grievance her champions could call up in her
behalf was that Kerfol was a lonely place, and that when her husband was
away on business at Rennes or Morlaix -- whither she was never taken --
she was not allowed so much as to walk in the park unaccompanied. But no
one asserted that she was unhappy, though one servant-woman said she had
surprised her crying, and had heard her say that she was a woman
accursed to have no child, and nothing in life to call her own. But that
was a natural enough feeling in a wife attached to her husband; and
certainly it must have been a great grief to Yves de Cornault that she
gave him no son. Yet he never made her feel her childlessness as a
reproach -- she herself admits this in her evidence -- but seemed to try
to make her forget it by showering gifts and favours on her. Rich though
he was, he had never been open-handed; but nothing was too fine for his
wife, in the way of silks or gems or linen, or whatever else she
fancied. Every wandering merchant was welcome at Kerfol, and when the
master was called away he never came back without bringing his wife a
handsome present -- something curious and particular -- from Morlaix or
Rennes or Quimper. One of the waiting-women gave, in cross-examination,
an interesting list of one year's gifts, which I copy. From Morlaix, a
carved ivory junk, with Chinamen at the oars, that a strange sailor had
brought back as a votive offering for Notre Dame de la Clarte, above
Ploumanac'h; from Quimper, an embroidered gown, worked by the nuns of
the Assumption; from Rennes, a silver rose that opened and showed an
amber Virgin with a crown of garnets; from Morlaix, again, a length of
Damascus velvet shot with gold, bought of a Jew from Syria; and for
Michaelmas that same year, from Rennes, a necklet or bracelet of round
stones -- emeralds and pearls and rubies -- strung like beads on a gold
wire. This was the present that pleased the lady best, the woman said.
Later on, as it happened, it was produced at the trial, and appears to
have struck the Judges and the public as a curious and valuable jewel.
The very same winter, the Baron absented himself again, this time
as far as Bordeaux, and on his return he brought his wife something even
odder and prettier than the bracelet. It was a winter evening when he
rode up to Kerfol and, walking into the hall, found her sitting
listlessly by the fire, her chin on her hand, looking into the fire. He
carried a velvet box in his hand and, setting it down on the hearth,
lifted the lid and let out a little golden-brown dog.
Anne de Cornault exclaimed with pleasure as the little creature
bounded toward her. "Oh, it looks like a bird or a butterfly!" she cried
as she picked it up; and the dog put its paws on her shoulders and
looked at her with eyes "like a Christian's." After that she would never
have it out of her sight, and petted and talked to it as if it had been
a child -- as indeed it was the nearest thing to a child she was to
know. Yves de Cornault was much pleased with his purchase. The dog had
been brought to him by a sailor from an East India merchantman, and the
sailor had bought it of a pilgrim in a bazaar at Jaffa, who had stolen
it from a nobleman's wife in China: a perfectly permissible thing to do,
since the pilgrim was a Christian and the nobleman a heathen doomed to
hellfire. Yves de Cornault had paid a long price for the dog, for they
were beginning to be in demand at the French court, and the sailor knew
he had got hold of a good thing; but Anne's pleasure was so great that,
to see her laugh and play with the little animal, her husband would
doubtless have given twice the sum.
So far, all the evidence is at one, and the narrative plain
sailing; but now the steering becomes difficult. I will try to keep as
nearly as possible to Anne's own statements; though toward the end, poor
thing . . .
Well, to go back. The very year after the little brown dog was
brought to Kerfol, Yves de Cornault, one winter night, was found dead at
the head of a narrow flight of stairs leading down from his wife's rooms
to a door opening on the court. It was his wife who found him and gave
the alarm, so distracted, poor wretch, with fear and horror -- for his
blood was all over her -- that at first the roused household could not
make out what she was saying, and thought she had gone suddenly mad. But
there, sure enough, at the top of the stairs lay her husband, stone
dead, and head foremost, the blood from his wounds dripping down to the
steps below him. He had been dreadfully scratched and gashed about the
face and throat, as if with a dull weapon; and one of his legs had a
deep tear in it which had cut an artery, and probably caused his death.
But how did he come there, and who had murdered him?
His wife declared that she had been asleep in her bed, and hearing
his cry had rushed out to find him lying on the stairs; but this was
immediately questioned. In the first place, it was proved that from her
room she could not have heard the struggle on the stairs, owing to the
thickness of the walls and the length of the intervening passage; then
it was evident that she had not been in bed and asleep, since she was
dressed when she roused the house, and her bed had not been slept in.
Moreover, the door at the bottom of the stairs was ajar, and the key in
the lock; and it was noticed by the chaplain (an observant man) that the
dress she wore was stained with blood about the knees, and that there
were traces of small blood-stained hands low down on the staircase
walls, so that it was conjectured that she had really been at the
postern-door when her husband fell and, feeling her way up to him in the
darkness on her hands and knees, had been stained by his blood dripping
down on her. Of course it was argued on the other side that the
blood-marks on her dress might have been caused by her kneeling down by
her husband when she rushed out of her room; but there was the open door
below, and the fact that the fingermarks in the staircase all pointed
upward.
The accused held to her statement for the first two days, in spite
of its improbability; but on the third day word was brought to her that
Herve de Lanrivain, a young nobleman of the neighbourhood, had been
arrested for complicity in the crime. Two or three witnesses thereupon
came forward to say that it was known throughout the country that
Lanrivain had formerly been on good terms with the lady of Cornault; but
that he had been absent from Brittany for over a year, and people had
ceased to associate their names. The witnesses who made this statement
were not of a very reputable sort. One was an old herb-gatherer
suspected of witch-craft, another a drunken clerk from a neighbouring
parish, the third a half-witted shepherd who could be made to say
anything; and it was clear that the prosecution was not satisfied with
its case, and would have liked to find more definite proof of
Lanrivain's complicity than the statement of the herb- gatherer, who
swore to having seen him climbing the wall of the park on the night of
the murder. One way of patching out incomplete proofs in those days was
to put some sort of pressure, moral or physical, on the accused person.
It is not clear what pressure was put on Anne de Cornault; but on the
third day, when she was brought into court, she "appeared weak and
wandering," and after being encouraged to collect herself and speak the
truth, on her honour and the wounds of her Blessed Redeemer, she
confessed that she had in fact gone down the stairs to speak with Herve
de Lanrivain (who denied everything), and had been surprised there by
the sound of her husband's fall. That was better; and the prosecution
rubbed its hands with satisfaction. The satisfaction increased when
various dependents living at Kerfol were induced to say -- with apparent
sincerity -- that during the year or two preceding his death their
master had once more grown uncertain and irascible, and subject to the
fits of brooding silence which his household had learned to dread before
his second marriage. This seemed to show that things had not been going
well at Kerfol; though no one could be found to say that there had been
any signs of open disagreement between husband and wife.
Anne de Cornault, when questioned as to her reason for going down
at night to open the door to Herve de Lanrivain, made an answer which
must have sent a smile around the court. She said it was because she was
lonely and wanted to talk with the young man. Was this the only reason?
she was asked; and replied: "Yes, by the Cross over your Lordships'
heads." "But why at midnight?" the court asked. "Because I could see him
in no other way." I can see the exchange of glances across the ermine
collars under the Crucifix.
Anne de Cornault, further questioned, said that her married life
had been extremely lonely: "desolate" was the word she used. It was true
that her husband seldom spoke harshly to her; but there were days when
he did not speak at all. It was true that he had never struck or
threatened her; but he kept her like a prisoner at Kerfol, and when he
rode away to Morlaix or Quimper or Rennes he set so close a watch on her
that she could not pick a flower in the garden without having a
waiting-woman at her heels. "I am no Queen, to need such honours," she
once said to him; and he had answered that a man who has a treasure does
not leave the key in the lock when he goes out. "Then take me with you,"
she urged; but to this he said that towns were pernicious places, and
young wives better off at their own firesides.
"But what did you want to say to Herve de Lanrivain?" the court
asked; and she answered: "To ask him to take me away."
"Ah -- you confess that you went down to him with adulterous
thoughts?"
Another smile must have passed around the court-room: in days when
any nobleman had a right to hang his peasants -- and most of them
exercised it -- pinching a pet animal's wind-pipe was nothing to make a
fuss about.
At this point one of the Judges, who appears to have had a certain
sympathy for the accused, suggested that she should be allowed to
explain herself in her own way; and she thereupon made the following
statement.
The first years of her marriage had been lonely; but her husband
had not been unkind to her. If she had had a child she would not have
been unhappy; but the days were long, and it rained too much.
It was true that her husband, whenever he went away and left her,
brought her a handsome present on his return; but this did not make up
for the loneliness. At least nothing had, till he brought her the little
brown dog from the East: after that she was much less unhappy. Her
husband seemed pleased that she was so fond of the dog; he gave her
leave to put her jewelled bracelet around its neck, and to keep it
always with her.
One day she had fallen asleep in her room, with the dog at her
feet, as his habit was. Her feet were bare and resting on his back.
Suddenly she was waked by her husband: he stood beside her, smiling not
unkindly.
"You look like my great-grandmother, Juliane de Cornault, lying in
the chapel with her feet on a little dog," he said.
The analogy sent a chill through her, but she laughed and answered:
"Well, when I am dead you must put me beside her, carved in marble, with
my dog at my feet."
"Oho -- we'll wait and see," he said, laughing also, but with his
black brows close together. "The dog is the emblem of fidelity."
"And do you doubt my right to lie with mine at my feet?"
"When I'm in doubt I find out," he answered. "I am an old man," he
added, "and people say I make you lead a lonely life. But I swear you
shall have your monument if you earn it."
"And I swear to be faithful," she returned, "if only for the sake
of having my little dog at my feet."
Not long afterward he went on business to the Quimper Assizes; and
while he was away his aunt, the widow of a great nobleman of the duchy,
came to spend a night at Kerfol on her way to the pardon of Ste. Barbe.
She was a woman of great piety and consequence, and much respected by
Yves de Cornault, and when she proposed to Anne to go with her to Ste.
Barbe no one could object, and even the chaplain declared himself in
favour of the pilgrimage. So Anne set out for Ste. Barbe, and there for
the first time she talked with Herve de Lanrivain. He had come once or
twice to Kerfol with his father, but she had never before exchanged a
dozen words with him. They did not talk for more than five minutes now:
it was under the chestnuts, as the procession was coming out of the
chapel. He said: "I pity you," and she was surprised, for she had not
supposed that any one thought her an object of pity. He added: "Call for
me when you need me," and she smiled a little, but was glad afterward,
and thought often of the meeting.
She confessed to having seen him three times afterward: not more.
How or where she would not say -- one had the impression that she feared
to implicate some one. Their meetings had been rare and brief; and at
the last he had told her that he was starting the next day for a foreign
country, on a mission which was not without peril and might keep him for
many months absent. He asked her for a remembrance, and she had none to
give him but the collar about the little dog's neck. She was sorry
afterward that she had given it, but he was so unhappy at going that she
had not had the courage to refuse.
Her husband was away at the time. When he returned a few days later
he picked up the little dog to pet it, and noticed that its collar was
missing. His wife told him that the dog had lost it in the undergrowth
of the park, and that she and her maids had hunted a whole day for it.
It was true, she explained to the court, that she had made the maids
search for the necklet -- they all believed the dog had lost it in the
park. . .
Her husband made no comment, and that evening at supper he was in
his usual mood, between good and bad: you could never tell which. He
talked a good deal, describing what he had seen and done at Rennes; but
now and then he stopped and looked hard at her; and when she went to bed
she found her little dog strangled on her pillow. The little thing was
dead, but still warm; she stooped to lift it, and her distress turned to
horror when she discovered that it had been strangled by twisting twice
round its throat the necklet she had given to Lanrivain.
The next morning at dawn she buried the dog in the garden, and hid
the necklet in her breast. She said nothing to her husband, then or
later, and he said nothing to her; but that day he had a peasant hanged
for stealing a faggot in the park, and the next day he nearly beat to
death a young horse he was breaking.
Winter set in, and the short days passed, and the long nights, one
by one; and she heard nothing of Herve de Lanrivain. It might be that
her husband had killed him; or merely that he had been robbed of the
necklet. Day after day by the hearth among the spinning maids, night
after night alone on her bed, she wondered and trembled. Sometimes at
table her husband looked across at her and smiled; and then she felt
sure that Lanrivain was dead. She dared not try to get news of him, for
she was sure her husband would find out if she did: she had an idea that
he could find out anything. Even when a witch-woman who was a noted
seer, and could show you the whole world in her crystal, came to the
castle for a night's shelter, and the maids flocked to her, Anne held
back. The winter was long and black and rainy. One day, in Yves de
Cornault's absence, some gypsies came to Kerfol with a troop of
performing dogs. Anne bought the smallest and cleverest, a white dog
with a feathery coat and one blue and one brown eye. It seemed to have
been ill-treated by the gypsies, and clung to her plaintively when she
took it from them. That evening her husband came back, and when she went
to bed she found the dog strangled on her pillow.
After that she said to herself that she would never have another
dog; but one bitter cold evening a poor lean greyhound was found whining
at the castle-gate, and she took him in and forbade the maids to speak
of him to her husband. She hid him in a room that no one went to,
smuggled food to him from her own plate, made him a warm bed to lie on
and petted him like a child.
Yves de Cornault came home, and the next day she found the
greyhound strangled on her pillow. She wept in secret, but said nothing,
and resolved that even if she met a dog dying of hunger she would never
bring him into the castle; but one day she found a young sheep-dog, a
brindled puppy with good blue eyes, lying with a broken leg in the snow
of the park. Yves de Cornault was at Rennes, and she brought the dog in,
warmed and fed it, tied up its leg and hid it in the castle till her
husband's return. The day before, she gave it to a peasant woman who
lived a long way off, and paid her handsomely to care for it and say
nothing; but that night she heard a whining and scratching at her door,
and when she opened it the lame puppy, drenched and shivering, jumped up
on her with little sobbing barks. She hid him in her bed, and the next
morning was about to have him taken back to the peasant woman when she
heard her husband ride into the court. She shut the dog in a chest and
went down to receive him. An hour or two later, when she returned to her
room, the puppy lay strangled on her pillow. . .
After that she dared not make a pet of any other dog; and her
loneliness became almost unendurable. Sometimes, when she crossed the
court of the castle, and thought no one was looking, she stopped to pat
the old pointer at the gate. But one day as she was caressing him her
husband came out of the chapel; and the next day the old dog was gone. . .
This curious narrative was not told in one sitting of the court, or
received without impatience and incredulous comment. It was plain that
the Judges were surprised by its puerility, and that it did not help the
accused in the eyes of the public. It was an odd tale, certainly; but
what did it prove? That Yves de Cornault disliked dogs, and that his
wife, to gratify her own fancy, persistently ignored this dislike. As
for pleading this trivial disagreement as an excuse for her relations --
whatever their nature -- with her supposed accomplice, the argument was
so absurd that her own lawyer manifestly regretted having let her make
use of it, and tried several times to cut short her story. But she went
on to the end, with a kind of hypnotized insistence, as though the
scenes she evoked were so real to her that she had forgotten where she
was and imagined herself to be re-living them.
At length the Judge who had previously shown a certain kindness to
her said (leaning forward a little, one may suppose, from his row of
dozing colleagues): "Then you would have us believe that you murdered
your husband because he would not let you keep a pet dog?"
"Yes, I can tell you. The dogs --" At that point she was carried
out of the court in a swoon.
It was evident that her lawyer tried to get her to abandon this line of
defense. Possibly her explanation, whatever it was, had seemed
convincing when she poured it out to him in the heat of their first
private colloquy; but now that it was exposed to the cold daylight of
judicial scrutiny, and the banter of the town, he was thoroughly ashamed
of it, and would have sacrificed her without a scruple to save his
professional reputation. But the obstinate Judge -- who perhaps, after
all, was more inquisitive than kindly -- evidently wanted to hear the
story out, and she was ordered, the next day, to continue her deposition.
She said that after the disappearance of the old watch-dog nothing
particular happened for a month or two. Her husband was much as usual:
she did not remember any special incident. But one evening a pedlar
woman came to the castle and was selling trinkets to the maids. She had
no heart for trinkets, but she stood looking on while the women made
their choice. And then, she did not know how, but the pedlar coaxed her
into buying for herself an odd pear-shaped pomander with a strong scent
in it -- she had once seen something of the kind on a gypsy woman. She
had no desire for the pomander, and did not know why she had bought it.
The pedlar said that whoever wore it had the power to read the future;
but she did not really believe that, or care much either. However, she
bought the thing and took it up to her room, where she sat turning it
about in her hand. Then the strange scent attracted her and she began to
wonder what kind of spice was in the box. She opened it and found a grey
bean rolled in a strip of paper; and on the paper she saw a sign she
knew, and a message from Herve de Lanrivain, saying that he was at home
again and would be at the door in the court that night after the moon
had set. . .
She burned the paper and then sat down to think. It was nightfall,
and her husband was at home. . . She had no way of warning Lanrivain,
and there was nothing to do but to wait. . .
At this point I fancy the drowsy courtroom beginning to wake up.
Even to the oldest hand on the bench there must have been a certain
aesthetic relish in picturing the feelings of a woman on receiving such
a message at night-fall from a man living twenty miles away, to whom she
had no means of sending a warning. . .
She was not a clever woman, I imagine; and as the first result of
her cogitation she appears to have made the mistake of being, that
evening, too kind to her husband. She could not ply him with wine,
according to the traditional expedient, for though he drank heavily at
times he had a strong head; and when he drank beyond its strength it was
because he chose to, and not because a woman coaxed him. Not his wife,
at any rate -- she was an old story by now. As I read the case, I fancy
there was no feeling for her left in him but the hatred occasioned by
his supposed dishonour.
At any rate, she tried to call up her old graces; but early in the
evening he complained of pains and fever, and left the hall to go up to
his room. His servant carried him a cup of hot wine, and brought back
word that he was sleeping and not to be disturbed; and an hour later,
when Anne lifted the tapestry and listened at his door, she heard his
loud regular breathing. She thought it might be a feint, and stayed a
long time barefooted in the cold passage, her ear to the crack; but the
breathing went on too steadily and naturally to be other than that of a
man in a sound sleep. She crept back to her room reassured, and stood in
the window watching the moon set through the trees of the park. The sky
was misty and starless, and after the moon went down the night was pitch
black. She knew the time had come, and stole along the passage, past her
husband's door -- where she stopped again to listen to his breathing --
to the top of the stairs. There she paused a moment, and assured herself
that no one was following her; then she began to go down the stairs in
the darkness. They were so steep and winding that she had to go very
slowly, for fear of stumbling. Her one thought was to get the door
unbolted, tell Lanrivain to make his escape, and hasten back to her
room. She had tried the bolt earlier in the evening, and managed to put
a little grease on it; but nevertheless, when she drew it, it gave a
squeak . . . not loud, but it made her heart stop; and the next minute,
overhead, she heard a noise. . .
"I heard dogs snarling and panting." (Visible discouragement of the
bench, boredom of the public, and exasperation of the lawyer for the
defense. Dogs again -- ! But the inquisitive Judge insisted.)
"Then I heard a sound like the noise of a pack when the wolf is
thrown to them -- gulping and lapping."
(There was a groan of disgust and repulsion through the court, and
another attempted intervention by the distracted lawyer. But the
inquisitive Judge was still inquisitive.)
"I don't know. There was no way out -- and there were no dogs at
Kerfol."
She straightened herself to her full height, threw her arms above
her head, and fell down on the stone floor with a long scream. There was
a moment of confusion in the court-room. Some one on the bench was heard
to say: "This is clearly a case for the ecclesiastical authorities" --
and the prisoner's lawyer doubtless jumped at the suggestion.
After this, the trial loses itself in a maze of cross-questioning
and squabbling. Every witness who was called corroborated Anne de
Cornault's statement that there were no dogs at Kerfol: had been none
for several months. The master of the house had taken a dislike to dogs,
there was no denying it. But, on the other hand, at the inquest, there
had been long and bitter discussion as to the nature of the dead man's
wounds. One of the surgeons called in had spoken of marks that looked
like bites. The suggestion of witchcraft was revived, and the opposing
lawyers hurled tomes of necromancy at each other.
At last Anne de Cornault was brought back into court -- at the
instance of the same Judge -- and asked if she knew where the dogs she
spoke of could have come from. On the body of her Redeemer she swore
that she did not. Then the Judge put his final question: "If the dogs
you think you heard had been known to you, do you think you would have
recognized them by their barking?"
"My dead dogs," she said in a whisper. . . She was taken out of
court, not to reappear there again. There was some kind of
ecclesiastical investigation, and the end of the business was that the
Judges disagreed with each other, and with the ecclesiastical committee,
and that Anne de Cornault was finally handed over to the keeping of her
husband's family, who shut her up in the keep of Kerfol, where she is
said to have died many years later, a harmless madwoman.
So ends her story. As for that of Herve de Lanrivain, I had only to
apply to his collateral descendant for its subsequent details. The
evidence against the young man being insufficient, and his family
influence in the duchy considerable, he was set free, and left soon
afterward for Paris. He was probably in no mood for a worldly life, and
he appears to have come almost immediately under the influence of the
famous M. Arnauld d'Andilly and the gentlemen of Port Royal. A year or
two later he was received into their Order, and without achieving any
particular distinction he followed its good and evil fortunes till his
death some twenty years later. Lanrivain showed me a portrait of him by
a pupil of Philippe de Champaigne: sad eyes, an impulsive mouth and a
narrow brow. Poor Herve de Lanrivain: it was a grey ending. Yet as I
looked at his stiff and sallow effigy, in the dark dress of the
Jansenists, I almost found myself envying his fate. After all, in the
course of his life two great things had happened to him: he had loved
romantically, and he must have talked with Pascal. . .