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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Histoire du chien de Brisquet / The Story
-of Brisquet's Dog, by Charles Nodier
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Histoire du chien de Brisquet / The Story of Brisquet's Dog
-
-Author: Charles Nodier
-
-Translator: Michael Wooff
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2017 [EBook #55605]
-
-Language: French
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTOIRE DU CHIEN DE BRISQUET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Michael Wooff
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Transcriber's note:
-
-The French-language etext below is followed by an English translation.
-
-The source edition is at http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5612458x.
-]
-
-
-
-
-Histoire du chien de Brisquet
-
-
-Charles Nodier (1780-1844)
-
-
-En notre forêt de Lions, vers le hameau de la
-Goupillière, tout près d'un grand puits-fontaine
-qui appartient à la chapelle Saint Mathurin, il y
-avait un bonhomme, bûcheron de son état, qui s'appelait
-Brisquet, ou autrement le fendeur à la bonne hache, et
-qui vivait pauvrement du produit de ses fagots, avec
-sa femme qui s'appelait Brisquette.
-
-Le bon Dieu leur avait donné deux jolis petits enfants,
-un garçon de sept ans qui était brun, et qui s'appelait
-Biscotin, et une blondine de six ans qui s'appelait
-Biscotine.
-
-Outre cela, ils avaient un chien bâtard à poil frisé,
-noir par tout le corps, si ce n'est au museau qu'il avait
-couleur de feu; et c'était bien le meilleur chien du pays,
-pour son attachement à ses maîtres.
-
-On l'appelait la Bichonne, parce que c'était peut-être une
-chienne.
-
-Vous vous souvenez du temps où il vint tant de loups dans
-la forêt de Lions. C'était dans l'année des grandes neiges,
-que les pauvres gens eurent si grand-peine à vivre. Ce fut
-une terrible désolation dans le pays.
-
-Brisquet, qui allait toujours à sa besogne, et qui ne craignait
-pas les loups à cause de sa bonne hache, dit un matin à Brisquette:
-«Femme, je vous prie de ne laisser courir ni Biscotin ni Biscotine,
-tant que M. le grand-louvetier ne sera pas venu. Il y aurait du
-danger pour eux. Ils ont assez de quoi marcher entre la butte et
-l'étang, depuis que j'ai planté des piquets le long de l'étang pour
-les préserver d'accident. Je vous prie aussi, Brisquette, de ne
-pas laisser sortir la Bichonne, qui ne demande qu'à trotter.»
-
-Brisquet disait tous les matins la même chose à Brisquette. Un
-soir il n'arrivait pas à l'heure ordinaire. Brisquette venait sur
-le pas de la porte, rentrait, ressortait, et disait en se croisant
-les mains: «Mon Dieu, qu'il est attardé!»
-
-Et puis elle sortit encore, en criant: «Eh! Brisquet!»
-
-Et la Bichonne lui sautait jusqu'aux épaules, comme pour lui dire:
---N'irai-je pas?
-
-«Paix! lui dit Brisquette.--Écoute, Biscotine, va jusque devers la
-butte pour savoir si ton père ne revient pas.--Et toi, Biscotin,
-suis le chemin au long de l'étang, en prenant bien garde s'il n'y
-a pas de piquets qui manquent.--Et crie fort: Brisquet! Brisquet!
-Paix, la Bichonne!»
-
-Les enfants allèrent, allèrent, et quand ils se furent rejoints à
-l'endroit où le sentier de l'étang vient couper celui de la butte:
-
-«Mordienne, dit Biscotin, je retrouverai notre pauvre père, ou les
-loups m'y mangeront.»
-
-«Pardienne, dit Biscotine, ils m'y mangeront bien aussi.»
-
-Pendant ce temps-là, Brisquet était revenu par le grand chemin de
-Puchay, en passant à la Croix aux Anes sur l'abbaye de Mortemer,
-parce qu'il avait une hottée de cotrets à fournir chez Jean Paquier.
-
-«As-tu vu nos enfants?» lui dit Brisquette.
-
-«Nos enfants?» dit Brisquet. «Nos enfants? Mon Dieu! sont-ils
-sortis?»
-
-«Je les ai envoyés à ta rencontre jusqu'à la butte et à l'étang,
-mais tu as pris par un autre chemin.»
-
-Brisquet ne posa pas sa bonne hache. Il se mit à courir du côté
-de la butte.
-
-«Si tu menais la Bichonne?» lui cria Brisquette.
-
-La Bichonne était déjà très loin.
-
-Elle était si loin que Brisquet la perdit bientôt de vue. Et il
-avait beau crier: «Biscotin! Biscotine!» on ne lui répondait pas.
-
-Alors il se prit à pleurer, parce qu'il s'imagina que ses enfants
-étaient perdus.
-
-Après avoir couru longtemps, longtemps, il lui sembla reconnaître
-la voix de la Bichonne. Il marcha droit dans le fourré, à l'endroit
-où il l'avait entendue, et il y entra, sa bonne hache levée.
-
-La Bichonne était arrivée là, au moment où Biscotin et Biscotine
-allaient être dévorés par un gros loup. Elle s'était jetée devant
-en aboyant, pour que ses abois avertissent Brisquet. Brisquet, d'un
-coup de sa bonne hache, renversa le loup raide mort, mais il était
-trop tard pour la Bichonne. Elle ne vivait déjà plus.
-
-Brisquet, Biscotin et Biscotine rejoignirent Brisquette. C'était
-une grande joie, et cependant tout le monde pleura. Il n'y avait
-pas un regard qui ne cherchât la Bichonne.
-
-Brisquet enterra la Bichonne au fond de son petit courtil sous une
-grosse pierre sur laquelle le maître d'école écrivit en latin:
-
-C'EST ICI QU'EST LA BICHONNE,
-LE PAUVRE CHIEN DE BRISQUET.
-
-Et c'est depuis ce temps-là qu'on dit en commun proverbe: Malheureux
-comme le chien à Brisquet, qui n'alla qu'une fois au bois, et que le
-loup mangea.
-
-
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-The Story of Brisquet's Dog
-
-
-Charles Nodier (1780-1844)
-
-
-In our forest of Lions, going towards the hamlet of La
-Goupillière, very close to a great well-spring belonging
-to the chapel of Saint Mathurin, there was a man, a wood
-cutter by trade, called Brisquet, or the good man with an
-axe, who lived frugally from the sale of his firewood with
-his wife, who was called Brisquette.
-
-God had given them two fine young children, a boy of seven
-who was dark and called Biscotin and a blonde girl of six
-who was called Biscotine.
-
-In addition to this they had a mongrel dog with curly hair,
-black all over its body with the exception of its nose, which
-was fire-red, and it was the best dog in those parts because
-of its devotion to its owners.
-
-They called it Bichonne because it might have been a bitch.
-
-Do you remember the time when all those wolves came to the
-forest of Lions? That was the year when it snowed a lot, when
-poor people had such a struggle just to stay alive. The region
-was totally desolate.
-
-Brisquet, who always went to work, and who did not fear the
-wolves owing to his sharp axe, said one morning to Brisquette:
-"Woman, do not let either Biscotin or Biscotine go out until
-the Wolffinder General has been. It's too dangerous for them
-out there. It's enough if they can walk from the mound to the
-pond now that I've put up a fence around the pond to stop them
-falling in. I'd also like to ask you, Brisquette, not to let
-the dog out. All she wants to do is go for walks."
-
-Brisquet said the same thing to Brisquette every morning. One
-evening he did not arrive home at his usual time. Brisquette
-came to the threshold, went back in, came back out and said as
-she clasped her hands together: "My God, how late he is!"
-
-And then she went out again shouting: "Eh! Brisquet!"
-
-And Bichonne jumped up at her to shoulder height as if to say:
-"Shall I go?"
-
-"Down!" said Brisquette. "Listen, Biscotine, go up to the mound
-to see if your father is on his way home. And you, Biscotin,
-follow the path along the pond and take good care if part of the
-fence is missing. And shout out loud: Brisquet! Brisquet! Get
-down, Bichonne!"
-
-The children went their separate ways and when they had met up at
-the place where the road to the pond crosses that to the mound they
-spoke:
-
-"Damn it," said Biscotin, "I'll find our poor father or the wolves
-can make a meal of me."
-
-"Damn me too," said Biscotine. "They can eat me too while they're
-at it."
-
-While all this was going on, Brisquet had come home via the main
-road to Puchay by way of the Asses' Cross and Mortemer Abbey as he
-had a bundle of thinly chopped firewood to deliver to Jean Paquier.
-
-"Have you seen our children?" said Brisquette.
-
-"Our children?" said Brisquet. "Our children? My God! Have they
-gone out?"
-
-"I sent them as far as the mound and the pond to meet you, but you
-came by a different route."
-
-Brisquet did not put down his sharp axe. He started to run in the
-direction of the mound.
-
-"Why don't you take Bichonne with you?" Brisquette shouted after him.
-
-But Bichonne was already way ahead of him.
-
-She was so far ahead that Brisquet soon lost sight of her. And it did
-him no good to shout: "Biscotin! Biscotine!" There was no answer.
-
-He started to cry then, for he imagined that his children were a lost
-cause.
-
-After running for a long long time, it seemed to him that he could hear
-Bichonne barking. He walked straight towards the thicket, to the place
-whee he had heard her and went in with his sharp axe raised.
-
-Bichonne had got there just as Biscotin and Biscotine were about to be
-devoured by a large wolf. She had thrown herself forward barking so that
-her barks could alert Brisquet.
-
-Brisquet with a single blow of his sharp axe struck the wolf stone dead,
-but it was too late for him to save Bichonne. She was dead already.
-
-Brisquet, Biscotin and Biscotine joined Brisquette. There was great
-rejoicing, yet they all wept tears. They all looked to see if Bichonne
-was there and she wasn't.
-
-Brisquet buried Bichonne at the bottom of his little garden under a big
-stone on which the schoolmaster wrote in Latin:
-
-HERE LIES BICHONNE,
-BRISQUET'S POOR DOG.
-
-And from that time on the following proverb came into common usage:
-To be wretched like Brisquet's dog that only went once to the wood and
-was eaten by the wolf.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Histoire du chien de Brisquet / The
-Story of Brisquet's Dog, by Charles Nodier
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTOIRE DU CHIEN DE BRISQUET ***
-
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