The
Man Who Planted Trees
by
Jean Giono
Translated
from French by Peter Doyle.
In order
for the character of a human being to reveal truly exceptional qualities, we
must have the good fortune to observe
its action over a long period of years. If this action is devoid of all selfishness,
if the idea that directs it is one of unqualified generosity, if it is absolutely
certain that it has not sought recompense anywhere, and if moreover it has left
visible marks on the world, then we are unquestionably dealing with an unforgettable
character.
About forty years ago I went on a long hike, through
hills absolutely unknown to tourists, in that very old region where the Alps
penetrate into Provence.
This region is bounded to the south-east and south by the middle course of the
Durance, between Sisteron and Mirabeau; to the north by the upper course of the
Drôme, from its source down to Die; to the west by the plains of Comtat
Venaissin and the outskirts of Mont Ventoux. It includes all the northern part
of the Département of Basses-Alpes, the south of Drôme and a little
enclave of Vaucluse.
At the time I undertook my long walk through this
deserted region, it consisted of barren and monotonous lands, at about 1200 to
1300 meters above sea level.
Nothing grew there except wild lavender.
I was crossing this country at its widest part,
and after walking for three days, I found myself in the most complete desolation.
I was camped next to the skeleton
of an abandoned village. I had used the last of my water the day before and I
needed to find more. Even though they were in ruins, these houses all huddled
together and looking like an old wasps’ nest made me think that there must at
one time have been a spring or a well there. There was indeed a spring, but it
was dry. The five or six roofless houses, ravaged by sun and wind, and the small
chapel with its tumble-down belfry, were arrayed like the houses and chapels
of living villages, but all life had disappeared.
It was a beautiful June day with plenty of sun,
but on these shelterless lands, high up in the sky, the wind whistled with an
unendurable brutality. Its growling
in the carcasses of the houses was like that of a wild beast disturbed during
its meal.
I had to move my camp. After five hours of walking,
I still hadn't found water, and nothing gave me hope of finding any. Everywhere
there was the same dryness,
the same stiff, woody plants. I thought I saw in the distance a small black silhouette.
On a chance I headed towards it. It was a shepherd. Thirty lambs or so were resting
near him on the scorching ground.
He gave me a drink from his gourd and a little
later he led me to his shepherd's cottage, tucked down in an undulation of the
plateau. He drew his water—excellent—from
a natural hole, very deep, above which he had installed a rudimentary
windlass.
This man spoke little. This is common among those
who live alone, but he seemed sure of himself, and confident in this assurance,
which seemed remarkable in
this land shorn of everything. He lived not in a cabin but in a real house of
stone, from the looks of which it was clear that his own labor had restored the
ruins he had found on his arrival. His roof was solid and water-tight. The wind
struck against the roof tiles with the sound of the sea crashing on the beach.
His household was in order, his dishes washed,
his floor swept, his rifle greased; his soup boiled over the fire; I noticed
then that he was also freshly shaven,
that all his buttons were solidly sewn, and that his clothes were mended with
such care as to make the patches invisible.
He shared his soup with me, and when afterwards
I offered him my tobacco pouch, he told me that he didn't smoke. His dog, as
silent as he, was friendly without
being fawning.
It had been agreed immediately that I would pass
the night there, the closest village being still more than a day and a half farther
on. Furthermore, I understood
perfectly well the character of the rare villages of that region. There are four
or five of them dispersed far from one another on the flanks of the hills, in
groves of white oaks at the very ends of roads passable by carriage. They are
inhabited by woodcutters who make charcoal. They are places where the living
is poor. The families, pressed together in close quarters by a climate that is
exceedingly harsh, in summer as well as in winter, struggle ever more selfishly
against each other. Irrational contention grows beyond all bounds, fueled by
a continuous struggle to escape from that place. The men carry their charcoal
to the cities in their trucks, and then return. The most solid qualities crack
under this perpetual Scottish shower. The women stir up bitterness. There is
competition over everything, from the sale of charcoal to the benches at church.
The virtues fight amongst themselves, the vices fight amongst themselves, and
there is a ceaseless general combat between the vices and the virtues. On top
of all that, the equally ceaseless wind irritates the nerves. There are epidemics
of suicides and numerous cases of insanity, almost always murderous.
The shepherd, who did not smoke, took out a bag
and poured a pile of acorns out onto the table. He began to examine them one
after another with a great deal
of attention, separating the good ones from the bad. I smoked my pipe. I offered
to help him, but he told me it was his own business. Indeed, seeing the care
that he devoted to this job, I did not insist. This was our whole conversation.
When he had in the good pile a fair number of acorns, he counted them out into
packets of ten. In doing this he eliminated some more of the acorns, discarding
the smaller ones and those that that showed even the slightest crack, for he
examined them very closely. When he had before him one hundred perfect acorns
he stopped, and we went to bed.
The company of this man brought me a feeling of
peace. I asked him the next morning if I might stay and rest the whole day with
him. He found that perfectly natural.
Or more exactly, he gave me the impression that nothing could disturb him. This
rest was not absolutely necessary to me, but I was intrigued and I wanted to
find out more about this man. He let out his flock and took them to the pasture.
Before leaving, he soaked in a bucket of water the little sack containing the
acorns that he had so carefully chosen and counted.
I noted that he carried as a sort of walking stick an iron rod as thick as his
thumb and about one and a half meters long. I set off like someone out for a
stroll, following a route parallel to his. His sheep pasture lay at the bottom
of a small valley. He left his flock in the charge of his dog and climbed up
towards the spot where I was standing. I was afraid that he was coming to reproach
me for my indiscretion, but not at all : It was his own route and he invited
me to come along with him if I had nothing better to do. He continued on another
two hundred meters up the hill.
Having arrived at the place he had been heading
for, he begin to pound his iron rod into the ground. This made a hole in which
he placed an acorn, whereupon
he covered over the hole again. He was planting oak trees. I asked him if the
land belonged to him. He answered no. Did he know whose land it was? He did not
know. He supposed that it was communal land, or perhaps it belonged to someone
who did not care about it. He himself did not care to know who the owners were.
In this way he planted his one hundred acorns with great care.
After the noon meal, he began once more to pick
over his acorns. I must have put enough insistence into my questions, because
he answered them. For three
years now he had been planting trees in this solitary way. He had planted one
hundred thousand. Of these one hundred thousand, twenty thousand had come up.
He counted on losing another half of them to rodents and to everything else that
is unpredictable in the designs of Providence. That left ten thousand oaks that
would grow in this place where before there was nothing.
It was at this moment that I began to wonder about his age. He was clearly more
than fifty. Fifty-five, he told me. His name was Elzéard Bouffier. He
had owned a farm in the plains, where he lived most of his life. He had lost
his only son, and then his wife. He had retired into this solitude, where he
took pleasure in living slowly, with his flock of sheep and his dog. He had concluded
that this country was dying for lack of trees. He added that, having nothing
more important to do, he had resolved to remedy the situation.
Leading as I did at the time a solitary life,
despite my youth, I knew how to treat the souls of solitary people with delicacy.
Still, I made a mistake. It
was precisely my youth that forced me to imagine the future in my own terms,
including a certain search for happiness. I told him that in thirty years these
ten thousand trees would be magnificent. He replied very simply that, if God
gave him life, in thirty years he would have planted so many other trees that
these ten thousand would be like a drop of water in the ocean.
He had also begun to study the propagation of
beeches. and he had near his house a nursery filled with seedlings grown from
beechnuts. His little wards, which
he had protected from his sheep by a screen fence, were growing beautifully.
He was also considering birches for the valley bottoms where, he told me, moisture
lay slumbering just a few meters beneath the surface of the soil.
We parted the next day.
The next year the war of 14 came, in which I was
engaged for five years. An infantryman could hardly think about trees. To tell
the truth, the whole business hadn't
made a very deep impression on me; I took it to be a hobby, like a stamp collection,
and forgot about it.
With the war behind me, I found myself with a
small demobilization bonus and a great desire to breathe a little pure air. Without
any preconceived notion
beyond that, I struck out again along the trail through that deserted country.
The land had not changed. Nonetheless, beyond
that dead village I perceived in the distance a sort of gray fog that covered
the hills like a carpet. Ever since
the day before I had been thinking about the shepherd who planted trees. “Ten
thousand oaks, I had said to myself, must really take up a lot of space.”
I had seen too many people die during those five years not to be able to imagine
easily the death of Elzéard Bouffier, especially since when a man is twenty
he thinks of a man of fifty as an old codger for whom nothing remains but to
die. He was not dead. In fact, he was very spry. He had changed his job. He only
had four sheep now, but to make up for this he had about a hundred beehives.
He had gotten rid of the sheep because they threatened his crop of trees. He
told me (as indeed I could see for myself) that the war had not disturbed him
at all. He had continued imperturbably with his planting.
The oaks of 1910 were now ten years old and were
taller than me and than him. The spectacle was impressive. I was literally speechless
and, as he didn't speak
himself, we passed the whole day in silence, walking through his forest. It was
in three sections, eleven kilometers long overall and, at its widest point, three
kilometers wide. When I considered that this had all sprung from the hands and
from the soul of this one man—without technical aids—it struck me that
men could be as effective as God in domains other than destruction.
He had followed his idea, and the beeches that
reached up to my shoulders and extending as far as the eye could see bore witness
to it. The oaks were now good
and thick, and had passed the age where they were at the mercy of rodents; as
for the designs of Providence, to destroy the work that had been created would
henceforth require a cyclone. He showed me admirable stands of birches that dated
from five years ago, that is to say from 1915, when I had been fighting at Verdun.
He had planted them in the valley bottoms where he had suspected, correctly,
that there was water close to the surface. They were as tender as young girls,
and very determined.
This creation had the air, moreover, of working
by a chain reaction. He had not troubled about it; he went on obstinately with
his simple task. But, in going
back down to the village, I saw water running in streams that, within living
memory, had always been dry. It was the most striking revival that he had shown
me. These streams had borne water before, in ancient days. Certain of the sad
villages that I spoke of at the beginning of my account had been built on the
sites of ancient Gallo-Roman villages, of which there still remained traces;
archeologists digging there had found fishhooks in places where in more recent
times cisterns were required in order to have a little water.
The wind had also been at work, dispersing certain
seeds. As the water reappeared, so too did willows, osiers, meadows, gardens,
flowers, and a certain reason to
live.
But the transformation had taken place so slowly that it had been taken for granted,
without provoking surprise. The hunters who climbed the hills in search of hares
or wild boars had noticed the spreading of the little trees, but they set it
down to the natural spitefulness of the earth. That is why no one had touched
the work of this man. If they had suspected him, they would have tried to thwart
him. But he never came under suspicion : Who among the villagers or the
administrators would ever have suspected that anyone could show such obstinacy
in carrying out this magnificent act of generosity?
Beginning in 1920 I never let more than a year go by without paying a visit to
Elzéard Bouffier. I never saw him waver or doubt, though God alone can
tell when God’s own hand is in a thing! I have said nothing of his disappointments,
but you can easily imagine that, for such an accomplishment, it was necessary
to conquer adversity; that, to assure the victory of such a passion, it was necessary
to fight against despair. One year he had planted ten thousand maples. They all
died. The next year,he gave up on maples and went back to beeches, which did
even better than the oaks.
To get a true 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 talking. Or maybe he just didn't see the need for it.
In 1933 he received the visit of an astonished
forest ranger. This functionary ordered him to cease building fires outdoors,
for fear of endangering this natural
forest. It was the first time, this naive man told him, that a forest had been
observed to grow up entirely on its own. At the time of this incident, he was
thinking of planting beeches at a spot twelve kilometers from his house. To avoid
the coming and going—because at the time he was seventy-five years old—he
planned to build a cabin of stone out where he was doing his planting. This he
did the next year.
In 1935, a veritable administrative delegation went to examine this “natural
forest”. There was an important personage from Waters and Forests,
a deputy, and some technicians. Many useless words were spoken. It was decided
to do something, but luckily nothing was done, except for one truly useful thing :
placing the forest under the protection of the State and forbidding anyone from
coming there to make charcoal. For it was impossible not to be taken with the
beauty of these young trees in full health. And the forest exercised its seductive
powers even on the deputy himself.
I had a friend among the chief foresters who were with the delegation. I explained
the mystery to him. One day the next week, we went off together to look for Elzéard
Bouffier, We found him hard at work, twenty kilometers away from the place where
the inspection had taken place.
This chief forester was not my friend for nothing.
He understood the value of things. He knew how to remain silent. I offered up
some eggs I had brought with
me as a gift. We split our snack three ways, and then passed several hours in
mute contemplation of the landscape.
The hillside whence we had come was covered with
trees six or seven meters high. I remembered the look of the place in 1913: a
desert…the peaceful and
steady labor, the vibrant highland air, his frugality, and above all, the serenity
of his soul had given the old man a kind of solemn good health. He was an athlete
of God. I asked myself how many hectares he had yet to cover with trees.
Before leaving, my friend made a simple suggestion concerning certain species
of trees to which the terrain seemed to be particularly well suited. He was not
insistent. “For the very good reason,” he told me afterwards, “that
this fellow knows a lot more about this sort of thing than I do.” After
another hour of walking, this thought having travelled along with him, he added :
“He knows a lot more about this sort of thing than anybody—and he has found
a jolly
good way of being happy!”
It was thanks to the efforts of this chief forester
that the forest was protected, and with it, the happiness of this man. He designated
three forest rangers for
their protection, and terrorized them to such an extent that they remained indifferent
to any jugs of wine that the woodcutters might offer as bribes.
The forest did not run any grave risks except
during the war of 1939. Then automobiles were being run on wood alcohol, and
there was never enough wood. They began to
cut some of the stands of the oaks of 1910, but the trees stood so far from any
useful road that the enterprise turned out to be bad from a financial point of
view, and was soon abandoned. The shepherd never knew anything about it. He was
thirty kilometers away, peacefully continuing his task, as untroubled by the
war of 39 as he had been of the war of 14.
I saw Elzéard Bouffier for the last time in June of 1945. He was then
eighty-seven years old. I had once more set off along my trail through the wilderness,
only to find that now, in spite of the shambles in which the war had left the
whole country, there was a motor coach running between the valley of the Durance
and the mountain. I set down to this relatively rapid means of transportation
the fact that I no longer recognized the landmarks I knew from my earlier visits.
It also seemed that the route was taking me through entirely new places. I had
to ask the name of a village to be sure that I was indeed passing through that
same region, once so ruined and desolate. The coach set me down at Vergons. In
1913, this hamlet of ten or twelve houses had had three inhabitants. They were
savages, hating each other, and earning their living by trapping: Physically
and morally, they resembled prehistoric men. The nettles devoured the abandoned
houses that surrounded them. Their lives were without hope, it was only a matter
of waiting for death to come: a situation that hardly predisposes one to
virtue.
All that had changed, even to the air itself. In place of the dry, brutal gusts
that had greeted me long ago, a gentle breeze whispered to me, bearing sweet
odors. A sound like that of running water came from the heights above:
It was the sound of the wind in the trees. And most astonishing of all, I heard
the sound of real water running into a pool. I saw that they had built a fountain,
that it was full of water, and what touched me most, that next to it they had
planted a lime-tree that must be at least four years old, already grown thick,
an incontestable symbol of resurrection.
Furthermore, Vergons showed the signs of labors for which hope is a requirement :
Hope must therefore have returned. They had cleared out the ruins, knocked down
the broken walls, and rebuilt five houses. The hamlet now counted twenty-eight
inhabitants, including four young families. The new houses, freshly plastered,
were surrounded by gardens that bore, mixed in with each other but still carefully
laid out, vegetables and flowers, cabbages and rosebushes, leeks and gueules-de-loup,
celery and anemones. It was now a place where anyone would be glad to live.
From there I continued on foot. The war from which
we had just barely emerged had not permitted life to vanish completely, and now
Lazarus was out of his tomb.
On the lower flanks of the mountain, I saw small fields of barley and rye; in
the bottoms of the narrow valleys, meadowlands were just turning green.
It has taken only the eight years that now separate us from that time for the
whole country around there to blossom with splendor and ease. On the site of
the ruins I had seen in 1913 there are now well-kept farms, the sign of a happy
and comfortable life. The old springs, fed by rain and snow now that are now
retained by the forests, have once again begun to flow. The brooks have been
channelled. Beside each farm, amid groves of maples, the pools of fountains are
bordered by carpets of fresh mint. Little by little, the villages have been rebuilt.
Yuppies have come from the plains, where land is expensive, bringing with them
youth, movement, and a spirit of adventure. Walking along the roads you will
meet men and women in full health, and boys and girls who know how to laugh,
and who have regained the taste for the traditional rustic festivals. Counting
both the previous inhabitants of the area, now unrecognizable from living in
plenty, and the new arrivals, more than ten thousand persons owe their happiness
to Elzéard Bouffier.
When I consider that a single man, relying only
on his own simple physical and moral resources, was able to transform a desert
into this land of Canaan, I am
convinced that despite everything, the human condition is truly admirable. But
when I take into account the constancy, the greatness of soul, and the selfless
dedication that was needed to bring about this transformation, I am filled with
an immense respect for this old, uncultured peasant who knew how to bring about
a work worthy of God.
Elzéard Bouffier died peacefully in 1947 at the hospice in Banon.