East of Paris: Sketches in the Gâtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne cover

East of Paris: Sketches in the Gâtinais, Bourbonnais, and Champagne

by Matilda Betham-Edwards

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About This Book

Matilda Betham-Edwards (1836-1919) was a novelist, travel writer and francophile. She was also a prolific poet and wrote several children's books. She corresponded with well-known English male poets of the day. She was born in Suffolk, England. Her interests ranged widely but a major commitment of her life and work was to France and the French. She considered France her second native land and made it her mission to bring about better understanding and sympathy between the two countries which shared her allegiance. The French government made her an Officier de l'Instruction Publique de France in recognition of her untiring efforts towards the establishment of a genuine and lasting entente cordiale. She was awarded a medal at the Anglo-French Exhibition of 1908.

26

Chapters

~312 min

Est. Listening Time

English

Language

3.0

Goodreads Rating

EAST OF PARIS

SKETCHES IN THE GÂTINAIS, BOURBONNAIS, AND CHAMPAGNE

By Miss Betham-Edwards

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTORY.

EAST OF PARIS

CHAPTER I. — MELUN

CHAPTER II. — MORET-SUR-LOING.

CHAPTER III. — BOURRON.

CHAPTER IV. — BOURRON—continued.

CHAPTER V. — BOURRON—continued.

CHAPTER VI. — LARCHANT.

CHAPTER VII. — RECLOSES.

CHAPTER VIII. — NEMOURS.

CHAPTER IX. — LA CHARITÉ-SUR-LOIRE.

CHAPTER X. — POUGUES.

CHAPTER XI. — NEVERS AND MOULINS.

CHAPTER XII. — SOUVIGNY AND SENS.

CHAPTER XIII. — ARCIS-SUR-AUBE.

CHAPTER XIV. — ARCIS-SUR-AUBE—(continued).

CHAPTER XV. — RHEIMS.

CHAPTER XVI. — RHEIMS—(continued).

CHAPTER XVII. — SOULAINES AND BAR-SUR-AUBE.

CHAPTER XVIII. — ST. JEAN DE LOSNE.

CHAPTER XIX. — NANCY.

CHAPTER XX. — IN GERMANISED LORRAINE.

CHAPTER XXI. — IN GERMANISED ALSACE.

INTRODUCTORY.

I here propose to zig-zag with my readers through regions of Eastern France not described in any of my former works. The marvels of French travel, no more than the chefs-d’oeuvre of French literature, are unlimited. Short of saluting the tricolour on Mont Blanc, or of echoing the Marseillaise four hundred and odd feet underground in the cave of Padirac, I think I may fairly say that I have exhausted France as a wonder-horn. But quiet beauties and homely graces have also their seduction, just as we turn with a sense of relief from “Notre Dame de Paris” or “Le Père Goriot,” to a domestic story by Rod or Theuriet, so the sweet little valley of the Loing refreshes after the awful Pass of Gavarni, and soothing to the ear is the gentle flow of its waters after the thundering Rhône. Majestic is the panorama spread before our eyes as we pic-nic on the Puy de Dôme. More fondly still my memory clings to many a narrower perspective, the view of my beloved Dijon from its vine-clad hills or of Autun as approached from Pré Charmoy, to me, the so familiar home of the late Philip Gilbert Hamerton. If, however, the natural marvels of France, like those of any other country, can be catalogued, French scenery itself offers inexhaustible variety. And so, having visited, re-visited, and re-visited again this splendid hexagon on the European map, I yet find in the choice of holiday resorts a veritable embarras de richesses. And many of the spots here described will, I have no doubt, be as new to my readers as they have been to myself—Larchant with its noble tower rising from the plain, recalling the still nobler ruin of Tclemcen on the borders of the Sahara—Recloses with its pictorial interiors and grand promontory overlooking a panorama of forest, sombre purplish green ocean unflecked by a single sail—Moret with its twin water-ways, one hardly knows which of the two being the more attractive—Nemours, favourite haunt of Balzac, memoralized in “Ursule Mirouët”—La Charité, from whose old-world dwellings you may throw pebbles into the broad blue Loire—Pougues, the prettiest place with the ugliest name, frequented by Mme. de Sévigné and valetudinarians of the Valois race generations before her time—Souvigny, cradle of the Bourbons, now one vast congeries of abbatial ruins—Arcis-sur-Aube, the sweet riverside home of Danton—its near neighbour, Bar-sur-Aube, connected with a bitterer enemy of Marie Antoinette than the great revolutionary himself, the infamous machinator of the Diamond Necklace. These are a few of the sweet nooks and corners to which of late years I have returned again and again, ever finding “harbour and good company.” And these journeys, I should rather say visits, East of Paris led me once more to that sad yearning France beyond the frontier, to homes as French, to hearts as devoted to the motherland as when I first visited the annexed provinces twenty years ago!

EAST OF PARIS

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