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Essay(s) by Hilaire Belloc
The Pyrenean Hive
Hilaire Belloc
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       Shut in between two of the greatest hills in Europe--hills almost as high as Etna, and covering with their huge bases half a county of land--there lies, in the Spanish Pyrenees, a little town. It has been mentioned in books very rarely, and visited perhaps more rarely. Of three men whom in my life I have heard speak its name, two only had written of it, and but one had seen it. Yet to see it is to learn a hundred things.
       There is no road to it. No wheeled thing has ever been seen in its streets. The crest of the Pyrenees (which are here both precipitous and extremely high) is not a ridge nor an edge, but a great wall of slabs, as it were, leaning up against the sky. Through a crack in this wall, between two of these huge slabs, the mountaineers for many thousand years have wormed their way across the hills, but the height and the extreme steepness of the last four thousand feet have kept that passage isolated and ill-known. Upon the French side the path has recently been renewed; within a few yards upon the southern slope it dwindles and almost disappears.
       As one so passes from the one country to the other, it is for all the world like the shutting of a door between oneself and the world. For some reason or other the impression of a civilisation active to the point of distress follows one all up the pass from the French railway to the summit of the range; but when that summit is passed the new and brilliant sun upon the enormous glaciers before one, the absence of human signs and of water, impress one suddenly with silence.
       From that point one scrambles down and down for hours into a deserted valley--all noon and afternoon and evening: on the first flats a rude path, at last appears. A river begins to flow; great waterfalls pour across one's way, and for miles upon miles one limps along and down the valley across sharp boulders such as mules go best on, and often along the bed of a stream, until at nightfall--if one has started early and has put energy into one's going, and if it is a long summer day--then at nightfall one first sees cultivated fields--patches of oats not half an acre large hanging upon the sides of the ravine wherever a little shelf of soil has formed.
       So went the Two Men upon an August evening, till they came in the half-light upon something which might have been rocks or might have been ruins--grey lumps against the moon: they were the houses of a little town. A sort of gulf, winding like a river gorge, and narrower than a column of men, was the street that brought us in. But just as we feared that we should have to grope our way to find companionship we saw that great surprise of modern mountain villages (but not of our own England)--a little row of electric lamps hanging from walls of an incalculable age.
       Here, in this heap of mountain stones, and led by this last of inventions, we heard at last the sound of music, and knew that we were near an inn. The Moors called (and call) an inn Fundouk; the Spaniards call it Fonda. To this Fonda, therefore, we went, and as we went the sound of music grew louder, till we came to a door of oak studded with gigantic nails and swung upon hinges which, by their careful workmanship and the nature of their grotesques, were certainly of the Renaissance. Indeed, the whole of this strange hive of mountain men was a mixture--ignorance, sharp modernity, utter reclusion: barbaric, Christian; ruinous and enduring things. The more recent houses had for the most part their dates marked above their doors. There were some of the sixteenth century, and many of the seventeenth, but the rest were far older, and bore no marks at all. There was but one house of our own time, and as for the church, it was fortified with narrow windows made for arrows.
       Not only did the Moors call an inn a Fundouk, but also they lived (and live) not on the ground floor, but on the first floor of their houses: so after them the Spaniards. We came in from the street through those great oaken doors, not into a room, but into a sort of barn, with a floor of beaten earth; from this a stair (every banister of which was separately carved in a dark-wood) led up to the storey upon which the inn was held. There was no hour for the meal. Some were beginning to eat, some had ended. When we asked for food it was prepared, but an hour was taken to prepare it, and it was very vile; the wine also was a wine that tasted as much of leather as of grapes, and reminded a man more of an old saddle than of vineyards.
       The people who put this before us had in their faces courage, complete innocence, carelessness, and sleep. They spoke to us in their language (I understood it very ill) of far countries, which they did not clearly know--they hardly knew the French beyond the hills. As no road led into their ageless village, so did no road lead out of it. To reach the great cities in the plain, and the railway eighty miles away, why, there was the telephone. They slept at such late hours as they chose; by midnight many were still clattering through the lane below. No order and no law compelled them in anything.
       The Two Men were asleep after this first astonishing glimpse of forgotten men and of a strange country. In the stifling air outside there was a clattering of the hoofs of mules and an argument of drivers. A long way off a man was playing a little stringed instrument, and there was also in the air a noise of insects buzzing in the night heat; when all of a sudden the whole place awoke to the noise of a piercing cry which but for its exquisite tone might have been the cry of pain, so shrill was it and so coercing to the ear. It was maintained, and before it fell was followed by a succession of those quarter-tones which only the Arabs have, and which I had thought finally banished from Europe. To this inhuman and appalling song were set loud open vowels rather than words.
       Of the Two Men, one leapt at once from his bed crying out, "This is the music! This is what I have desired to hear!" For this is what he had once been told could be heard in the desert, when first he looked out over the sand from Atlas: but though he had travelled far, he had never heard it, and now he heard it here, in the very root of these European hills. It was on this account that he cried out, "This is the music!" And when he had said this he put on a great rough cloak and ran to the room from which the song or cry proceeded, and after him ran his companion.
       The Two Men stood at the door behind a great mass of muleteers, who all craned forward to where, upon a dais at the end of the room, sat a Jewess who still continued for some five minutes this intense and terrible effort of the voice. Beside her a man who was not of her race urged her on as one urges an animal to further effort, crying out, "Hap! Hap!" and beating his palms together rhythmically and driving and goading her to the full limit of her power.
       The sound ceased suddenly as though it had been stabbed and killed, and the woman whose eyes had been strained and lifted throughout as in a trance, and whose body had been rigid and quivering, sank down upon herself and let her eyelids fall, and her head bent forward.
       There was complete silence from that moment till the dawn, and the second of the Two Men said to the first that they had had an experience not so much of music as of fire.
       [The end]
       Hilaire Belloc's essay: The Pyrenean Hive
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"King Lear"
The Absence Of The Past
The Arena
Arles (city)
At The Sign Of The Lion
The Autumn And The Fall Of Leaves
The Battle Of Hastings
A Blue Book
Caedwalla
The Canigou
The Captain Of Industry
Carcassonne
The Cerdagne
The Channel
Charles Of Orleans
Clement Marot
Companions Of Travel
The Coronation
The Death Of Wandering Peter
The Decline Of A State
Delft (town)
The Departure
The Election
The Empire Builder
The End Of The World
The Excursion
The Eye-Openers
A Family Of The Fens
The First Day's March
A Force In Gaul
The Free Press
The Game Of Cards
The Good Woman
The Great Sight
The Griffin (Inn)
The Guns
The Harbour In The North
His Character
Home
The Idea Of A Pilgrimage
In Patria
The Inheritance Of Humour
The Inn Of The Margeride
The Inventor
The Ironmonger
Joachim Du Bellay
Jose Maria De Heredia
The Letter
Letter Of Advice And Apology To A Young Burglar
The Looe Stream
The Lost Things
The Lunatic
Lynn (Town)
Malherbe
The Man And His Wood
The Man Of The Desert
The Monkey Question: An Appeal To Common Sense
The Mowing Of A Field
Mr. The Duke: The Man Of Malplaquet
A Norfolk Man
Normandy And The Normans
The North Sea
The Odd People
The Old Gentleman's Opinions
The Old Things
On "Mails"
On A Child Who Died
On A Dog And A Man Also
On A Faery Castle
On A Fisherman And The Quest Of Peace
On A Great Wind
On A Hermit Whom I Knew
On A House
On A Lost Manuscript
On A Man And His Burden
On A Man Who Was Protected By Another Man
On A Notebook
On A Rich Man Who Suffered
On A Southern Harbour
On A Van Tromp
On A Winged Horse And The Exile Who Rode Him
On A Young Man And An Older Man
On Advertisement
On An Unknown Country
On Bridges
On Cheeses
On Coming To An End
On Conversations In Trains
On Death
On Ely (isle)
On Entries
On Error
On Experience
On Getting Respected In Inns And Hotels
On Historical Evidence
On Ignorance
On Immortality
On Jingoes: In The Shape Of A Warning
On Lords
On National Debts
On Past Greatness
On Railways And Things
On Sacramental Things
On Tea
On The Approach Of An Awful Doom
On The Decline Of The Book
On The Departure Of A Guest
On The Hotel At Palma And A Proposed Guide-Book
On The Illness Of My Muse
On The Pleasure Of Taking Up One's Pen
On The Reading Of History
On The Return Of The Dead
On The Sources Of Rivers
On Them
On Thruppenny Bits
On Unknown People
On Weighing Anchor
The Onion-Eater
Perigeux Of The Perigord
A Plea For The Simpler Drama
The Portrait Of A Child
The Position
The Public
The Pyrenean Hive
Reality
The Regret
The Relic
The Return To England
The Reveillon
The Reward Of Letters
The Roman Road
The Roman Roads In Picardy
Roncesvalles
Ronsard
The Sea-Wall Of The Wash
The Singer
The Slant Off The Land
St. Patrick
The Tide
The Tree Of Knowledge
A Unit Of England
The Valley Of The Rother
The Victory
The Views Of England
Villon
The Way To Fairyland
The Wing Of Dalua