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Mother Sauvage
Fifteen years had passed since I was at Virelogne. I returned there in the autumn to shoot
with my friend Serval, who had at last rebuilt his chateau, which the Prussians had
destroyed.
I loved that district. It is one of those delightful spots which have a sensuous charm for
the eyes. You love it with a physical love. We, whom the country enchants, keep tender
memories of certain springs, certain woods, certain pools, certain hills seen very often
which have stirred us like joyful events. Sometimes our thoughts turn back to a corner in
a forest, or the end of a bank, or an orchard filled with flowers, seen but a single time on
some bright day, yet remaining in our hearts like the image of certain women met in the
street on a spring morning in their light, gauzy dresses, leaving in soul and body an
unsatisfied desire which is not to be forgotten, a feeling that you have just passed by
happiness.
At Virelogne I loved the whole countryside, dotted with little woods and crossed by
brooks which sparkled in the sun and looked like veins carrying blood to the earth. You
fished in them for crawfish, trout and eels. Divine happiness! You could bathe in places
and you often found snipe among the high grass which grew along the borders of these
small water courses.
I was stepping along light as a goat, watching my two dogs running ahead of me, Serval,
a hundred metres to my right, was beating a field of lucerne. I turned round by the thicket
which forms the boundary of the wood of Sandres and I saw a cottage in ruins.
Suddenly I remembered it as I had seen it the last time, in 1869, neat, covered with vines,
with chickens before the door. What is sadder than a dead house, with its skeleton
standing bare and sinister?
I also recalled that inside its doors, after a very tiring day, the good woman had given me
a glass of wine to drink and that Serval had told me the history of its people. The father,
an old poacher, had been killed by the gendarmes. The son, whom I had once seen, was a
tall, dry fellow who also passed for a fierce slayer of game. People called them "Les
Sauvage."
Was that a name or a nickname?
I called to Serval. He came up with his long strides like a crane.
I asked him:
"What's become of those people?"
This was his story:
 

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