Part 33 (1/2)
It was nearly ten at night when the body of Mathurin Lumineau was reverently placed by friendly hands in the great punt used for carrying forage, and which had so often been seen returning from the meadows laden with hay, one of the Terre-Aymont children perched on the top, singing.
The body was laid in the middle of the boat, covered with a white sheet by the hands of Mere Ma.s.sonneau; on it she placed a copper crucifix.
Toussaint Lumineau took his place in the stern at his son's head.
Standing in the bow with their punt poles were the two sons of Glorieux de la Terre-Aymont, two lanterns at their feet to light them on their way.
The boat left the bank amid the laments of those present, and proceeded slowly down the Grand Ca.n.a.l, the wind driving the mists of the Marais towards it as it advanced.
When at a short distance from La Seuliere, a voice from land exclaimed:
”There it is! I hear the punt poles; I see the lights!”
The doors of both rooms were thrown open; the lamplight shone out, illuminating the hillock on which the house stood; the stunted trees on the edge of the d.y.k.e looked silvery out of the darkness. Now all those present at the dance, young men and maidens, came forth in long procession down to the bank to greet the mournful convoy. In their gala dresses they knelt on the muddy bank, their coifs and ap.r.o.ns blown about in the wind. Silently they watched the approach of the white shroud covering the remains of the cripple, their senior by so few years, and the poor old father sitting bent double in the stern, his head almost touching his knees, motionless as the dead son he was guarding.
Behind the others knelt a tall girl supported by two of her companions kneeling on either side of her, the blue kerchief and gold chain she wore conspicuous in the light that streamed from the house. All were silent. All followed with their eyes the boat as it slowly glided away again into the darkness. The sound of the punt poles, as they dipped the water, gradually died away; the ripples left on the smooth surface of the water subsided. The white shroud had pa.s.sed away into the ever-deepening fog. There remained only a glimmer of light, the faint reflection of the lanterns pa.s.sing across the meadows; soon nothing could be distinguished from out the enveloping darkness into which the punt had disappeared.
”Poor eldest Lumineau! the handsomest of us all!”
In the solitude of the Marais, whither the pity of his fellow creatures could not accompany him, the old father wept as he looked on the burden at his feet; he wept, too, when lifting up his head his eyes lighted on the stalwart lads plying the punt poles, who, faithful to their home and soil, were keeping on the straight course.