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The man Who Planted Trees
By Jean Giono
FOR a human character to reveal truly
exceptional qualities, one must have the good fortune to be able to
observe its performance over many years. If this performance is devoid of
all egoism, if its guiding motive is unparalleled generosity, if it
is absolutely certain that there is no thought of recompense and
that, in addition, it has left its visible mark upon the earth, then
there can be no mistake.
About forty years ago I was taking a long
trip on foot over mountain heights quite
unknown to tourists, in that ancient region where the Alps thrust down into
Provence. All this, at the time I embarked upon my long walk through
these deserted regions, was barren and colorless land. Nothing
grew there but wild lavender.
I was crossing the area at its widest
point, and after three days' walking, found myself in the midst of
unparalleled desolation. I camped near the vestiges of an abandoned
village. I had run out of water the day before, and had to find
some. These clustered houses, although in ruins, like an old wasps'
nest, suggested that there must once have been a spring or well here.
There was indeed a spring. but it was dry. The five or six houses,
roofless, gnawed by wind and rain, the tiny chapel with its crumbling
steeple, stood about like the houses and chapels in living villages,
but all life had vanished.
It was a fine June day, brilliant with
sunlight, but over this unsheltered land, high in the sky, the wind blew with
unendurable ferocity. It growled over the carcasses of the houses
like a lion disturbed at its meal. I had to move my camp.
After five hours' walking I had still not
found water and there was nothing to give me any hope of finding
any. All about me was the same dryness, the same coarse grasses.
I thought I glimpsed in the distance a small black silhouette,
upright, and took it for the trunk of a solitary tree. In any case
I started toward it. It was a shepherd. Thirty sheep were lying
about him on the baking earth.
He gave me a drink from his water-gourd
and, a little later, took me to his cottage in a fold of the plain.
He drew his water - excellent water - from a very deep natural well
above which he had constructed a primitive winch.
The man spoke little. This is the way of
those who live alone, but one felt that he was sure of himself,
and confident in his assurance. That was unexpected in this barren country. He
lived, not in a cabin, but in a real house built of stone that
bore plain evidence of how his own efforts had reclaimed the ruin he
had found there on his arrival. His roof was strong and sound. The wind on its
tiles made the sound of the sea upon its shore.
The place was in order, the dishes washed,
the floor swept, his rifle oiled; his soup was boiling over the fire.
I noticed then that he was cleanly shaved, that all his
buttons were firmly sewed on, that his clothing had been mended with the
meticulous care that makes the mending invisible. He shared his soup
with me and afterwards, when I offered my tobacco pouch, he told
me that he did not smoke. His dog, as silent as himself, was friendly
without being servile.
It was understood from the first that I
should spend the night there; the nearest village was still more than a
day and a half away. And besides I was perfectly familiar with the
nature of the rare villages in that region. There were four or five of
them scattered well apart from each other on these mountain
slopes, among white oak thickets, at the extreme end of the wagon roads.
They were inhabited by charcoalburners, and the living was bad. Families, crowded
together in a climate that is excessively harsh both in winter and in
summer, found no escape from the unceasing conflict of
personalities. Irrational ambition reached inordinate proportions in the
continual desire for escape. The men took their wagonloads of charcoal to
town, then returned. The soundest characters broke under the
perpetual grind. The women nursed their grievances. There was rivalry
in everything, over the price of charcoal as over a pew in the
church, over warring virtues as over warring vices as well as over the
ceaseless combat between virtue and vice. And over all there was
the wind, also ceaseless, to rasp upon the nerves. There were
epidemics of suicide and frequent cases of insanity, usually homicidal.
The shepherd went to fetch a small sack
and poured out a heap of acorns on the table. He began to inspect them,
one by one, with great concentration, separating the good from
the bad. l smoked my pipe. I did offer to help him. He told me that it
was his job. And in fact, seeing the care he devoted to the task, I
did not insist. That was the whole of our conversation. When he
had set aside a large enough pile of good acorns he counted them
out by tens, meanwhile eliminating the small ones or those which
were slightly cracked, for now he examined them more closely. When he
had thus selected one hundred perfect acorns he stopped and we
went to bed.
There was peace in being with this man.
The next day I asked if I might rest here for a day. He found it
quite natural-or, to be more exact, he gave me the impression that
nothing could startle him. The rest was not absolutely necessary, but I
was interested and wished to know more about him. He opened the pen
and led his flock to pasture. Before leaving, he plunged his
sack of carefully selected and counted acorns into a pail of water.
I noticed that he carried for a stick an
iron rod as thick as my thumb and about a yard and a half long. Resting
myself by walking, I followed a path parallel to his. His pasture was in
a valley. He left the dog in charge of the little flock and
climbed toward where I stood. I was afraid that he was about to rebuke me
for my indiscretion, but it was not that at all: this was the way
he was going, and he invited me to go along if I had nothing better to
do. He climbed to the top of the ridge, about a hundred yards away.
There he began thrusting his iron rod into
the earth, making a hole in which he planted an acorn; then he
refilled the hole. He was planting oak trees. I asked him if the
land belonged to him. He answered no. Did he know whose it was? He did not.
He supposed it was community property, or perhaps
belonged to people who cared nothing about it. He was not interested in finding
out whose it was. He planted his hundred acorns with the
greatest care.
After the midday meal he resumed his
planting. I suppose I must have been fairly insistent in my questioning,
for he answered me. For three years he had been planting trees in
this wilderness. He had planted one hundred thousand. Of the
hundred thousand, twenty thousand had sprouted. Of the twenty thousand he
still expected to lose about half, to rodents or to the
unpredictable designs of Providence. There remained ten thousand oak trees to
grow where nothing had grown before.
That was when I began to wonder about the
age of this man. He was obviously over fifty. Fifty-five, he told
me. His name was Elzeard Bouffier. He had once had a farm in the
lowlands. There he had had his life. He had lost his only son,
then his wife. He had withdrawn into this solitude where his
pleasure was to live leisurely with his lambs and his dog. It was his
opinion that this land was dying for want of trees. He added that,
having no very pressing business of his own, he had resolved to remedy this
state of affairs.
Since I was at that time, in spite of my
youth. leading a solitary life, I understood how to deal gently with
solitary spirits. But my very youth forced me to consider the
future in relation to myself and to a certain quest for happiness. I
told him that in thirty years his ten thousand oaks would be
magnificent. He answered quite simply that if God granted him life, in
thirty years he would have planted so many more that these ten
thousand would be like a drop of water in the ocean.
Besides, he was now studying the
reproduction of beech trees and had a nursery of seedlings grown from
beechnuts near his cottage. The seedlings, which he had protected from his
sheep with a wire fence, were very beautiful. He was also
considering birches for the valleys where, he told me, there was a certain
amount of moisture a few yards below the surface of the soil.
The next day, we parted.
THE following year came the War of 1914,
in which I was involved for the next five years. An infantryman hardly
had time for reflecting upon trees. To tell the truth, the thing
itself had made no impression upon me; I had considered it as a hobby,
stamp collection, and forgotten it.
The war over, I found myself possessed of
a tiny demobilization bonus and a huge desire to breathe fresh air for
a while. It was with no other objective that I again took the
road to the barren lands.
The countryside had not changed. However,
beyond the deserted village I glimpsed in the distance a sort of
greyish mist that covered the mountaintops like a carpet. Since the day
before, I had begun to think again of the shepherd tree-planter.
"Ten thousand oaks," I reflected, "really take up
quite a bit of space ."
I had seen too many men die during those
five years not to imagine easily that Elzeard Bouffier was dead,
especially since, at twenty, one regards men of fifty as old men with
nothing left to do but die. He was not dead. As a matter of fact, he was
extremely spry. He had changed jobs. Now he had only four sheep
but, instead, a hundred beehives. He had got rid of the sheep
because they threatened his young trees. For, he told me ( and I saw
for myself ), the war had disturbed him not at all. He had
imperturbably continued to plant.
The oaks of 1910 were then ten years old
and taller than either of us. It was an impressive spectacle. I was
literally speechless and, as he did not talk, we spent the
whole day walking in silence through his forest. In three sections, it
measured eleven kilometers in length and three kilometers at its
greatest width. When you remembered that all this had sprung from the hands
and the soul of this one man, without technical resources, you
understood that men could be as effectual as God in other realms than that of
destruction.
He had pursued his plan, and beech trees
as high as my shoulder, spreading out as far as the eye could reach,
confirmed it. He showed me handsome clumps of birch planted five years
before-that is, in 1915, when I had been fighting at Verdun. He had set
them out in all the valleys where he had guessed-and rightly-that
there was moisture almost at the surface of the ground. They were as
delicate as young girls, and very well established.
Creation seemed to come about in a sort of
chain reaction. He did not worry about it; he was determinedly
pursuing his task in all its simplicity; but as we went back toward the
village I saw water flowing in brooks that had been dry since the
memory of man. This was the most impressive result of chain reaction
that I had seen. These dry streams had once, long ago, run with
water. Some of the dreary villages I mentioned before had been built
on the sites of ancient Roman settlements, traces of which still
remained; and archaeologists, exploring there, had found fishhooks
where, in the twentieth century, cisterns were needed to assure a small
supply of water.
The wind, too, scattered seeds. As the
water reappeared, so there reappeared willows, rushes, meadows,
gardens, flowers, and a certain purpose in being alive. But the
transformation took place so gradually that it became part of the pattern without
causing any astonishment. Hunters, climbing into the wilderness in pursuit of
hares or wild boar, had of course noticed the sudden growth of
little trees, but had attributed it to some natural caprice of the earth.
That is why no one meddled with Elzeard Bouffier's work. If he had
been detected he would have had opposition. He was undetectable.
Who in the villages or in the administration could have
dreamed of such perseverance in a magnificent generosity?
To have anything like a precise idea of
this exceptional character one must not forget that he worked in
total solitude: so total that, toward the end of his life, he lost the
habit of speech. Or perhaps it was that he saw no need for it.
IN 1933 he received a visit from a forest
ranger who notified him of an order against lighting fires out of
doors for fear of endangering the growth of this natural forest. It was
the first time, the man told him naively, that he had ever heard
of a forest growing of its own accord. At that time Bouffier was
about to plant beeches at a spot some twelve kilometers from his
cottage. In order to avoid travelling back and forth-for he was then
seventy-five-he planned to build a stone cabin right at the
plantation. The next year he did so.
In 1935 a whole delegation came from the
Government to examine the "natural forest." There was a
high official from the Forest Service, a deputy, technicians.
There was a great deal of ineffectual talk. It was decided that
something must be done and, fortunately, nothing was done except the
only helpful thing: the whole forest was placed under the protection of
the State, and charcoal burning prohibited. For it was impossible
not to be captivated by the beauty of those young trees in the
fulness of health. and they cast their spell over the deputy himself.
A friend of mine was among the forestry officers of the delegation.
To him I explained the mystery. One day the following week we
went together to see Elzeard Bouffier. We found him hard at work, some
ten kilometers from the spot where the inspection had taken place.
This forester was not my friend for
nothing. He was aware of values. He knew how to keep silent. I delivered the
eggs I had brought as a present. We shared our lunch among the
three of us and spent several hours in wordless contemplation of the
countryside.
In the direction from which we had come
the slopes were covered with trees twenty to twenty-five feet tall. I
remembered how the land had looked in 1913: a desert ....
Peaceful, regular toil, the vigorous mountain air, frugality and, above all,
serenity of spirit had endowed this old man with awe-inspiring health. He
was one of God's athletes. I wondered how many more acres
he was going to cover with trees.
Before leaving, my friend simply made a
brief suggestion about certain species of trees that the soil here seemed
particularly suited for. He did not force the point. "For the
very good reason," he told me later, "that Bouffier
knows more about it than I do." At the end of an hour's walking-having turned
it over in his mind-he added, "He knows a lot more about it
than anybody. He's discovered a wonderful way to be happy!"
It was thanks to this officer that not
only the forest but also the happiness of the man was protected. He
delegated three rangers to the task, and so terrorized them that
they remained proof against all the bottles of wine the
charcoalburners could offer.
The only serious danger to the work
occurred during the war of 1939. As cars were being run on gazogenes
(wood-burning generators), there was never enough wood. Cutting was started
among the oaks of 1910, but the area was so far from any railroads
that the enterprise turned out to be financially unsound. It was
abandoned. The shepherd had seen nothing of it. He was thirty
kilometers away, peacefully continuing his work. ignoring the war of
'39 as he had ignored that of '14.
I SAW Elzeard Bouffier for the last time
in June of 1945. He was then eighty-seven. I had started back
along the route through the wastelands; but now, in spite of the
disorder in which the war had left the country, there was a bus running
between the Durance Valley and the mountain. I attributed the fact
that I no longer recognized the scenes of my earlier journeys to this
relatively speedy transportation. It seemed to me, too, that the route took me
through new territory. It took the name of a village to convince me
that I was actually in that region that had been all ruins and
desolation.
The bus put me down at Vergons. In 1913
this hamlet of ten or twelve houses had three inhabitants. They had
been savage creatures, hating one another, living by trapping game,
little removed, both physically and morally, from the conditions of
prehistoric man. All about them nettles were feeding upon the remains
of abandoned houses. Their condition had been beyond hope. For
them, nothing but to await death-a situation which rarely
predisposes to virtue.
Everything was changed. Even the air.
Instead of the harsh dry winds that used to attack me, a gentle
breeze was blowing, laden with scents. A sound like water came from the
mountains: it was the wind in the forest. Most amazing of all, I
heard the actual sound of water falling into a pool. I saw that a
fountain had been built, that it flowed freely and-what touched me
most-that someone had planted a linden beside it, a linden that must
have been four years old, already in full leaf, the incontestable symbol of
resurrection.
Besides, Vergons bore evidence of labor at
the sort of undertaking for which hope is required. Hope, then,
had returned. Ruins had been cleared away, dilapidated walls torn
down and five houses restored. Now there were twenty-eight inhabitants, four
of them young married couples. The new houses, freshly plastered, were
surrounded by gardens where vegetables and flowers grew in orderly confusion,
cabbages and roses, leeks and snapdragons, celery and anemones. It was
now a village where one would like to live.
From that point on I went on foot. The war
just finished had not yet allowed the full blooming of life, but
Lazarus was out of the tomb. On the lower slopes of the mountain
I saw little fields of barley and of rye; deep in the narrow
valleys the meadows were turning green.
It has taken only the eight years since
then for the whole countryside to glow with health and prosperity. On the
site of ruins I had seen in 1913 now stand neat farms, cleanly
plastered, testifying to a happy and comfortable life. The old
streams, fed by the rains and snows that the forest conserves, are
flowing again. Their waters have been channeled. On each farm, in
groves of maples, fountain pools overflow onto carpets of fresh mint.
Little by little the villages have been rebuilt. People from
the plains, where land is costly, have settled here, bringing
youth, motion, the spirit of adventure. Along the roads you meet hearty
men and women, boys and girls who understand laughter and have
recovered a taste for picnics. Counting the former population, unrecognizable now
that they live in comfort, more than ten thousand people owe their
happiness to Elzeard Bouffier.
When I reflect that one man, armed only
with his own physical and moral resources, was able to cause this
land of Canaan to spring from the wasteland, I am convinced that in
spite of everything, humanity is admirable. But when I compute the
unfailing greatness of spirit and the tenacity of benevolence that it
must have taken to achieve this result, I am taken with an immense
respect for that old and unlearned peasant who was able to complete a work
worthy of God.
Elzeard Bouffier died peacefully in 1947
at the hospice in Banon.