Tripping to Aix-en-Provence

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Americans are constantly asking me how I can stand to live in France. “The French are so rude,” they say. “Isn’t it awful to live there?” A few weeks ago I had an opportunity to observe French manners on the shuttle bus that goes from the TGV station just outside of Aix-en-Provence into the center of town.   On most days our little bus carries a handful of passengers and takes about 15 minutes to get into the city. I was taking the bus on August 1, however, and on that day all bets are off, because on that day an immense vacuum cleaner sucks up most of the 10 million people who live in Paris and deposits them either on the highways around the city (the radio reported a traffic jam in Burgundy 30 kilometers long) or onto the trains, planes and busses that lead into “France Profonde,” i.e., the rest of the country. I thus found myself on a hot and uncomfortable train in the company of what seemed like 8 million people with 20 million pieces of luggage and 100,000 crying babies. The instant the train glided to a stop at the sleek new TGV station at Aix-en-Provence I bolted from the door and made a dash for our little bus: luckily it was still loading, and with a sigh of relief I slid into my favorite seat, the one immediately behind and above the driver that would give me a full view of the road and the surrounding Provencal countryside from the bus’s panoramic window.   As it turned out, my regular seat also gave me front row center for one of this summer’s most amusing pieces de theatre, a new play called The August 1 Trip From the TGV to Aix, starring M. Le Chauffeur de Bus and a fabulous supporting cast of Mssrs. et  Mmes. Les Passagers en Vacance a Aix-en-Provence.   The First Act curtain rose on a wonderful lady in her late seventies. She had bright orange hair—a color much favored by ladies of fashion here in the South—and she was elaborately made up and over-dressed in the manner of a French provincial dame, swathed in a cloud of frou-frous, shawls, ribbons and frills in shades of vivid orange, scarlet red and lemon yellow. Limping and lurching heavily (she seemed to have a bad knee; I sympathized), she heaved herself up the first two steps of the bus; then she plopped her cloth traveling bag down on the space in front of the driver and opened a pudgy, sweaty hand to reveal a crumpled 10€ bill.   The driver—a man in his forties with an accent that said Morocco—smiled benevolently.   Do you have 1€?” he asked. (This was an act of kindness, for without asking her age, he was informing her that she had a right to the senior citizen fare.)   At first the lady did not understand. Very patiently, the driver therefore explained to her that the fare was “only 1€.”   “1€?”   “1€.”   The lady still looked puzzled. “That’s all?”   “That’s all.”   Finally she gave a gallic shrug and leaned over to unzip her cloth bag. She began rummaging around inside the bag and after a minute or so produced a zipped and snappered change purse which she slowly unzipped and un-snapped. Then she wriggled her fingers around until she found a bright and-shiny 1€ coin.   “C’est ça?” she asked, still not daring to trust her good fortune. “C’est tout?”   “Oui, madame,” said the driver politely. He took the coin, pressed a few buttons on his ticket machine and thanked her politely as he handed her a receipt.   Very deliberately, the lady folded the receipt in half and slipped it into her change purse. She carefully re-snapped and re-zipped the change purse; then she returned the purse to its hiding place deep in the entrails of her carrying case. Only when she had completely re-zipped the carrying case did she finally pick up her luggage and begin moving towards the interior of the bus.   The lady’s transaction seemed to me to have taken at least 45 minutes. People in the line behind her were rolling their eyes, but the driver gave no indication of impatience, even though the line had by then grown quite long. He quietly explained the fare to the next passenger, and two or three people were soon able to board without delay or complication as the curtain fell on Act I.   Act II was short but filled with humor and irony.   “What is the fare?” asked a well-dressed, 40ish gentleman who was carrying what the French call “un attaché case” (pronounced “Attaché keze”) and an umbrella. Clearly a Parisian, I thought, very poised and elegant—and of course ready for rain at any minute, because it rains all the time in Paris.   “3€ 40 centimes,” said the driver.   The Parisian looked puzzled: his expression said, Do the provincials always have to pay to ride the bus? But he quickly realized that he had the means to solve the problem.   “May I pay by check?”   “Of course, Monsieur,” said the driver. “I will be happy to take your check.”   The Parisian then proceeded to search (interminably) for his checkbook, first in his suit pocket, then in his pants pocket, then in his other suit pocket, then in the other pants pocket. Several minutes later, after a series of misunderstandings about the exact spelling of the name of the bus company, the date and the amount, all of which the driver resolved with celestial patience, he handed over a check for 3€ 40 (about $4 US).   The driver’s “Merci Monsieur” brought down the curtain on Act II.   The dramatic high point of the afternoon came in Act III. Two aristocratic young Brits opened the Act by sauntering into the bus with an expression that we Americans think of as supremely English, a combination of boredom and condescension that includes both a curling of the lip and a lifting of the eyebrow. We’re familiar with that expression from a million movies that feature butlers and women who look like horses; it had a…
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