What a picture!Had Jasmin lived in the time of St.Vincent de Paul,the saint would have embraced him a thousand times,and rejoiced to see himself in one way surpassed;for in pleading for the poor,he also helped the rich by celebrating the great deeds of their ancestors,as he did at Beziers,Riquet,Albi,Lafeyrouse,and other places.The spectacle which he presented was so extraordinary,that all France was struck with admiration at the qualities of this noble barber of Agen.
On one occasion Jasmin was requested by a curate to come to his help and reconcile him with his parishioners.Jasmin succeeded in performing the miracle.It happened that in 1846the curate of Saint-Leger,near Penne,in the Tarn,had caused a ball-room to be closed.This gave great offence to the young people,who desired the ball-room to be opened,that they might have their fill of dancing.They left his church,and declared that they would have nothing further to do with him.To reconcile the malcontents,the curate promised to let them hear Jasmin.accordingly,one Sunday afternoon the inhabitants of four parishes assembled in a beautiful wood to listen to Jasmin.He recited his Charity and some other of his serious poems.When he had finished,the young people of Saint-Leger embraced first the poet,and then the curate.The reconciliation was complete.
To return to the church at Vergt.Jasmin was a poet,not an architect.The Abbe Masson knew nothing about stone or mortar.
He was merely anxious to have his church rebuilt and consecrated as soon as possible.That had been done in 1843.But in the course of a few years it was found that the church had been very badly built.The lime was bad,and the carpentry was bad.
The consequence was,that the main walls of the church bulged out,and the shoddy building had to be supported by outside abutments.In course of time it became clear that the work,for the most part,had to be done over again.
In 1847the Abbe again appealed to Jasmin.This new task was more difficult than the first,for it was necessary to appeal to a larger circle of contributors;not confining themselves to Perigord only,but taking a wider range throughout the South of France.The priest made the necessary arrangements for the joint tour.They would first take the northern districts--Angouleme,Limoges,Tulle,and Brives--and then proceed towards the south.
The pair started at the beginning of May,and began their usual recitations and addresses,such as had been given during the first journey in Perigord.They were received with the usual enthusiasm.Prefects,bishops,and municipal bodies,vied with each other in receiving and entertaining them.At Angouleme,the queen of southern cities,Jasmin was presented with a crown of immortelles and a snuff-box,on which was engraved:
"Esteem--Love--Admiration!To Jasmin,the most sublime of poets!
From the youth of Angouleme,who have had the happiness of seeing and hearing him!"The poet and priest travelled by night as well as by day in order to economise time.After their tour in the northern towns and cities,they returned to Vergt for rest.They entered the town under a triumphal arch,and were escorted by a numerous cavalcade.Before they retired to the priest's house,the leading men of the commune,in the name of the citizens,complimented Jasmin for his cordial help towards the rebuilding of the church.