
The
sheer physical diversity of France would
be hard to exhaust in a lifetime of
visits. The landscapes range from the
fretted coasts of Brittany to the
limestone hills of Provence, the canyons
of the Pyrenees and the half-moon bays
of Corsica, from the lushly wooded
valleys of the Dordogne to the glaciated
peaks of the Alps. Each
region
looks and feels different, has its own
style of architecture, its
characteristic food and often its own
patois or dialect. Though the French
word
pays is the term for a whole
country, local people frequently refer
to their own immediate vicinity as
mon pays - my country - and to a
person from another town as a foreigner.
This strong sense of regional identity,
often expressed in the form of active
separatist movements, as in Brittany and
Corsica, has persisted over centuries in
the teeth o centralized administrative
control from Paris.
Perhaps the most striking feature of
the French countryside is the
sense of space. There are huge tracts of
woodland and undeveloped land without a
house in sight. Industrialization came
relatively late, and the country remains
very rural. Away from the main urban
centres, hundreds of towns and villages
have changed only slowly and organically,
their old houses and streets intact, as
much a part of the natural landscape as
the rivers, hills and fields.
The nation's legacy of history and
culture is so widely dispersed across
the land that even if you were to
confine your traveling to one particular
region you would still have a powerful
sense of the past without having to seek
out major sights. With its wealth of
local detail, France is an ideal country
for dawdling; there is always something
to catch the eye and gratify the senses,
whether you are meandering down a lane,
picnicking by a slow, green river, or
sipping Pernod in a village café. There
is also endless scope for all kinds of
outdoor activities, from walking,
canoeing and cycling to the more
expensive pleasures of skiing and
sailing.
If you need more than urban stimuli
to activate the pleasure buds - clubs,
shops, fashion, movies, music, hanging
out with the beautiful and famous - then
the great cities provide them in
abundance. Paris, of course, is an
outstanding cultural centre, with its
stunting contemporary buildings and
atmospheric back streets, its art and
its ethnic diversity. And the great
provincial cities like Lille and Lyon,
Bordeaux, Toulouse, Marseille and Nice
vie with the capital and each other,
like the city-states of old, for
prestige in the arts, ascendancy in
sport and innovation in urban transport.
For a thousand years and more, France
has been at the cutting edge of
European development, and the legacy
of this wealth, energy and experience is
everywhere evident in the astonishing
variety of things to see: from the
Gothic cathedrals of the north to the
Romanesque churches of the centre and
west, the châteaux of the Loire, the
Roman monuments of the south, the ruined
castles of the English and the Cathars
and the Dordogne's prehistoric cave-paintings.
If not all the legacy is so tangible -
the literature, music and ideas of the
1789 Revolution, for example - much has
been recuperated and illustrated in
museums and galleries across the nation,
from colonial history to fishing
techniques, aeroplane design to
textiles, migrant shepherds to manicure,
battlefields and coalmines.
Many of the museums are models
of clarity and modern design. Among
those that the French do best are
museums devoted to local arts, crafts
and customs like the Musée National des
Arts et Traditions Populaires in Paris
and the Musée Dauphinois in Grenoble.
But inevitably first place must go to
the fabulous collections of fine art,
many of which are in Paris, for
the simple reason that the city has
nurtured so many of the finest creative
artists of the last hundred years, both
French, Monet and Matisse for example,
and foreign, such as Picasso and Van
Gogh.
If you are quite untroubled by a need
to improve your mind in the
contemplation of old stones and works of
art, France is equally well endowed to
satisfy to satisfy the grosser appetites.
The French have made a high art of daily
life: eating, drinking, dressing, moving
and simply being. The Pleasures of
the palate run from the simplest
picnic of crusty baguette, ham and
cheese washed down by an inexpensive red
wine through what must be the most
elaborate takeaway food in the world,
available from practically every
charcuterie; such basis regional dishes
as cassoulet; the liver-destroying
riches of Périgord and Burgundy cuisine;
the fruits of the sea; extravagant
pastries and ice-cream cakes; to the
trance-inducing refinements - and prices
- of the great chefs. And there are
wines to match, at all prices, and not
just feel inadequate in the face of all
this choice, never be afraid to ask
advice, for most French people are true
devotees, ever ready to explain the
arcane mysteries to the uninitiated.