Gretel le Maître Ponders Beauty, with Bede & other guests
Gretel le Maître likes to look for the beauty and curiosities in life, one day at a time. She shares with you snippets from books about history, art and literature and regularly takes you on adventures to new locations, to explore churches, cathedrals and architecture. We’ve reached 67,000 downloads. Thank you!! 🙏
Gretel invites you to accompany her as she navigates the world a day at a time; the podcast is unscripted, it’s ad-free.
Gretel loves the world and history, architecture, literature and people. And so is determined to walk this path with light footsteps and with humour and warmth. Let’s gather up the beautiful things and ponder them in our hearts.
Top 10 in Global Rankings according to Listen Notes. I would be so grateful if you would spare the time to give me a kind review 🤗
Previous guests include:
historian Tom Holland (who has kindly agreed to be the podcast’s Honorary Patron); Sir Richard Eyre; Actors Guy Henry and Enzo Cilenti; Art historian Philip Mould; Writer David Willem; Composer Matthew Coleridge; Vicar Angela Tilby; Aerial photographer Hedley Thorne; Author Bijan Omrani; Journalist and Historian Sir Simon Jenkins; Dorset garden hedgehog family, the Venerable Bede and other guests.
Future guests (all being well) are Tom Holland again, John Simpson, Kevin Stroud, Philippa Langley again, Clair Crawford, David Crowther, Philip Mould again, David Willem again, Aidan Ridyard and Katie Channon
Gretel le Maître Ponders Beauty, with Bede & other guests
Strictly Villette: Chapter XXVIII. Monsieur Paul and Lucy Snowe
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Gretel le Maître likes to look for the beauty and curiosities in life, one day at a time. She shares with you snippets from books about history, art and literature and regularly takes you on adventures to new locations, to explore churches, cathedrals and architecture. We’ve reached 66,000 downloads. Thank you!!
Historian Tom Holland is the Honorary Patron of this podcast. Thank you Tom🙏
Gretel invites you to accompany her as she navigates the world a day at a time; the podcast is unscripted, it’s ad-free.
Gretel loves the world and history, architecture, literature and people. And so is determined to walk this path with light footsteps and with humour and warmth. Let’s gather up the beautiful things and ponder them in our hearts.
Top 10 in Global Rankings according to Listen Notes. I would be so grateful if you would spare the time to give me a kind review and possibly 5 stars (for effort as I realise it’s not deserved for achievement)🥴
Previous guests include historian Tom Holland; Sir Richard Eyre; Actors Guy Henry and Enzo Cilenti; Art historian Philip Mould; Writer David Willem; Composer Matthew Coleridge; Vicar Angela Tilby; Aerial photographer Hedley Thorne; Author Bijan Omrani; Journalist and Historian Sir Simon Jenkins; Dorset garden hedgehog family, the Venerable Bede and other guests.
Future guests (all being well) are Tom Holland again, John Simpson, Kevin Stroud, Philippa Langley again, David Crowther, ...
Uh Charles Pronte's Villette Volume three Chapter twenty eight The Watch Guard Monsieur Paul Emmanuel owned an acute sensitiveness to the annoyance of interruption from whatsoever cause occurring during his lessons to pass through the class under such circumstances was considered by the teachers and pupils of the school, individually and collectively, to be as much as a woman's or girl's life was worth. Madame Beck herself, if forced to the enterprise, would scurry through, retrenching her skirts and carefully coasting the formidable estrade like a ship dreading breakers, as to Rosine, the portress, on whom every half hour devolved the fearful duty of fetching pupils out of the very heart of one or other of the divisions, to take their music lessons in the oratory, the great or little salon, the salamanget, or some other piano station, she would, upon her second or third attempt, frequently become almost tongue tied from the excess of consternation, a sentiment inspired by the unspeakable looks levelled at her through a pair of dart dealing spectacles. One morning I was sitting in the Care at work upon a piece of embroidery which one of the pupils had commenced but delayed to finish, and while my fingers wrought at the frame, my ears regaled themselves with listening to the crescendos and cadences of a voice haranguing in the neighbouring class, in tones that waxed momentally more unquiet, more ominously varied. There was a good strong partition wall between me and the gathering storm, as well as a facile means of flight through the glass door to the court in case it swept this way, so I am afraid I derived more amusement than alarm from these thickening symptoms. Poor Rosine was not so safe. Four times that blessed morning had she made the par passage of peril, and now for the fifth time it became her dangerous duty to snatch, as it were, a brand from the burning, a pupil from under Monsieur Pool's nose. Mon Dieu, mon dieu cried she. Cuvier Monsieur Vadui Jesuur car il duncoler. Nerved by the courage of desperation she opened the door. Mademoiselle La Malopiano was her cry. Ere she could make her good retreat or quite close the door, this voice uttered itself Des Mont La Classe Defondu La Premier Quri Set Port du Pasera Par set new page division surra pondu fuds madame Beck Elm. Ten minutes had not succeeded the promulgation of this decree, when Rosine's French pantofle were again heard shuffling along the corridor. Mademoiselle, said she, I would not for a five franc piece go into that class again just now. Monsieur's lunettes are really terrible, and here is a commissioner come with a message from the Athenay. I have told Madame Beck I dare not deliver it, and she says I am to charge you with it. Me? No, that is rather too bad. It is not in my line of duty. Come come, Rosine, bear your own burden. Be brave. Charge once more Aye, Mademoiselle Impossible. Five times I have crossed him this day. Madame must really hire a gendarme for this service. Oof Jon Pipleu Bah, you're only a coward. What is the message? Precisely the kind which Monsieur least likes to be pestered. An urgent summons to go directly to the Athenae, as there is an official visitor. Inspector, I know not, arrived, and Monsieur must meet him. You know how he hates a must. Yes, I knew well enough. The restive little man detested spur or curb. Against whatever was urgent or obligatory, he was sure to revolt. However, I accepted the responsibility, not certainly without fear, but fear blent with other sentiments, curiosity amongst them. I opened the door, I entered, I closed it behind me as quickly and quietly as a rather unsteady hand would permit, for to be slow or bustling, to rattle a latch or leave a door gaping wide were aggravations of crime often more disastrous in result than the main crime itself. There I stood, and there he sat. His humour was visibly bad, almost at its worst. He had been given a lesson in arithmetic, for he gave lessons on any and every subject that struck his fancy, and arithmetic being a dry subject invariably disagreed with him. Not a pupil but trembled when he spoke of figures. He sat bent above his desk, to look up at the sound of an entrance, at the occurrence of a direct breach of his will and law was an effort he could not for the moment bring himself to make. It was quite as well. I thus gained time to walk up the long class, and it suited my idiosyncrasy far better. The near burst of anger like his than to bear its menace at a distance. At his estrade I paused just in front. Of course I was not worthy of immediate attention. He proceeded with his lesson. Disdain would not do. He must hear and he must answer my message. Not being quite tall enough to lift my head over his desk, elevated upon the estrade, and thus suffering eclipse in my present position, I ventured to peep around with the design at first of merely getting a better view of his face which had struck me when I entered as bearing a close and picturesque resemblance to that of a black and sallow tiger. Twice did I enjoy this side view with impunity, advancing and receding unseen. The third time my eye had scarce dawned beyond the obscuration of the desk when it was caught and transfixed through its very pupil, transfixed by the lunette. Rosine was right. These utensils had in them a blank and immutable terror beyond the mobile wrath of the wearer's own unglazed eyes. I now found the advantage of proximity. These short sighted lunettes were useless for the inspection of a criminal under Monsieur's nose. Accordingly he doffed them, and he and I stood on more equal terms. I was glad I was not really much afraid of him, that, indeed, close in his presence I felt no terror at all, for upon his demanding cord and gibbet to execute the sentence recently pronounced, I was able to furnish him with a needleful of embroidering thread with such accommodating civility as could not but allay some portion of at least some of his surplus irritation. Of course I did not parade this courtesy before public view. I merely handed the thread round the angle of the desk, and attached it ready noosed, to the barred back of the professor's chair. said he, in a growl, of which the music was wholly confined to his chest and throat, for he kept his teeth clenched and seemed registering to himself an inward vow that nothing earthly should wring him wring from him a smile. My answer commenced uncompromisingly. Monsieur, I said, je voulus des choses inui, and thinking it best not to mince matters, but to administer the douche with decision in a low but quick voice, I delivered the Athenian message, floridly exaggerating its urgency. Don't you just love Lucy Snow? Of course he would never hear a word of it. He would not go, he would not leave his present class, let all the officials in Villette send for him. He would not put himself an inch out of his way at the bidding of King, Cabinet, and Chambers together. I knew, however, that he must go, that talk as he would, both his duty and interest commanded an immediate and literal compliance with the summons. I stood therefore, waiting in silence, as if he had not yet spoken. He asked what more I wanted. Only Monsieur's answer to deliver to the commissioner. He waved an impatient negative. I ventured to stretch my hand to the Bonnet Grec which lay in grim repose on the window sill. He followed this daring movement with his eye, no doubt in mixed pity and amazement at it at its presumption. Ah, he muttered, if it came to that. If Miss Lucy meddled with his Bonnet Grec, she might just put it on herself, turn garcon for the occasion, and benevolently go to the Athenae in his stead. With great respect I laid the bonnet bonnet on the desk, where its tassel seemed to give me an awful nod. I'll write a note of apology. That will do, said he, still bent on his evasion. Knowing well it would not do, I gently pushed the bonnet towards his hand. Thus impelled it slid down the polished slope of the varnished and unbased desk, and carried before it the light steel framed lunettes, and fearful to relate, they fell to the estrade. A score of times ere now had I seen them fall and receive no damage, this time, as Lucy Snow's hapless luck would have it, they so fell that each clear pebble became a shivered and shapeless star. Now indeed dismay seized me, dismay and regret. I knew the value of those lunettes. Monsieur Poul's sight was peculiar, not easily fitted, and those glasses suited him. I had heard him call them his treasures. As I picked them up, cracked and worthless, my hand trembled. Frightened through all my nerves I was to see the mischief I had done, but I think I was even more sorry than afraid. For some seconds I dared not look the bereaved professor in the face. He was the first to speak. La, said he, Me voila Vef de Melunet. I think Mademoiselle Lucy will now confess that the cord and gallows are amply earned. She trembles in anticipation of her doom. Ah, Treitres, Treitres, you are resolved to have me quite blind and helpless in your hands. I lifted my eyes. His face, instead of being irate, lowering and furrowed, was overflowing with the smile, coloured with the bloom I had seen brightening it that evening at the hotel Cressi. He was not angry, not even grieved, for the real injury he showed himself full of clemency, under the real provocation, patient as a saint. This event which seemed so untoward, which I thought had ruined at once my chance of successful persuasion, proved my best help. Difficult of management so long as I had done him no harm, he became graciously pliant as soon as I stood in his presence, a conscious and contrite offender. Still gently railing at me as unfort fam, unglaise terrible, unput, he declared that he dared not but obey one who had given such an instance of her dangerous prowess. It was absolutely like the Grand Emperor, smashing the vase to inspire, inspire dismay. So at last, crowning himself with his Bonet Crec and taking his ruined lunette from my hand with a clasp of kind pardon and encouragement, he made his bow and went off to the Athenae in first rate humour and spirits. After all this amiability, the reader will be sorry for my sake to hear that I was quarrelling with Monsieur Paul again before night, yet so it was, and I could not help it. It was his occasional custom, and a very laudable one, an acceptable custom too, to arrive of an evening always a lamprovist, unannounced, burst in on the silent hour of study, establish a sudden despotism over us and our occupations, cause books to be put away, work bags to be brought out, and drawing forth a single thick volume or a handful of pamphlets, substitute for the besotted lecture peers, drawed by a sleepy pupil, some tragedy made grand by a grand reading, ardent by fiery action, some drama whereof, for my part I rarely studied the intrinsic merit, for Monsieur Emmanuel made it a vessel for an outpouring and filled it with his native verve and passion like a cup with its vital brewage, or else he would flash through our conventional conventual darkness, a reflex of a brighter world, show us a glimpse of the current literature of the day, read us passages from some enchanting tale, or the last witty Foyuton which had awakened laughter in the saloons of Paris, taking care always to expunge with the severest hand, whether from tragedy, melodrama, tale or essay, whatever passage, phrase or word could be deemed unsuited to an audience of jeune files. I noticed more than once that where retrenchment without substitute would have left unmeaning vacancy or introduced weakness, he could and did improvise whole paragraphs, no less vigorous than irreproachable. The dialogue, the description he engrafted, was often far better than that he pruned away. Well, on the evening in question we were sitting silent as nuns in a retreat, the pupils studying, the teachers working. I remember my work, it was a slight matter of fancy, and it rather interested me. It had a purpose. I was not doing it merely to kill the time, I meant it when finished as a gift, and the occasion of presentation being near, haste was requisite, and my fingers were busy. We heard the sharp bell peal which we all knew, then the rapid step familiar to each ear, the words voila monsieur had scarcely broke simultaneously from every lip, when the two leaved door split, as split it always did for his admission. Such a slow word as open is inefficient to describe his movements, and he stood in the midst of us. There were two study tables, both long and flanked with benches, over the centre of each hung a lamp. Beneath this lamp on either side the table sat a teacher. The girls were arranged to the right hand and the left, the eldest and most studious nearest the lamps, or to pique, and the idlers and little ones towards the north and south poles. Monsieur's habit was politely to hand a chair to some teacher, generally Zellie Saint Pierre, the senior senior mistress, then to take her vacated seat and thus avail himself of the full beam of cancer of or capricorn, which owing to his near sight he needed. As usual, Cellie rose with alacrity, smiling to the whole extent of her mouth, and the full display of her upper and lower rows of teeth, that strange smile which passes from ear to ear and is marked only by a sharp thin curve, which fails to spread over the countenance, and neither dimples the cheek nor lights the eye. I suppose Monsieur did not see her, or he had taken a whim that he would not notice her, for he was as capricious as women are said to be. Then his lunette, he had got another pair, served as an excuse for all sorts of little oversights and shortcomings. Whatever might be his reason, he passed by Zelly, came to the other side of the table, and before I could start up to clear the way, whispered Nobougi Pa, and established himself between me and Miss Fanshaw, who always would be my neighbour, and have her elbow in my side, however often I declared to her Ginevra, I wish you were at Jericho. It was easy to say no bougi pas, but how could I help it? I must make him room, and I must request the pupils to recede, that I might recede. It was very well for Ginevre to be gummed to me, keeping herself warm, as she said, on the winter evenings, and harassing my very heart with her fidgetings and pokings, obliging me indeed, sometimes, to put an artful pin in my girdle by way of protection against her elbow, but I suppose Monsieur Emanuel was not to be subjected to the same kind of treatment, so I swept away my working materials to clear space for his book and withdrew myself to make room for his person, not, however, leaving more than a yard of interval, just what any respectable man would have regarded as a convenient, respectful allowance of bench. But Monsieur Emmanuel never was reasonable, flint and tender that he was. He struck and took fire directly. Vous ne voulez pas de moi pour voisin, he growled. Vou donet les air du caste Vret Empara, he scowled. Sovas arrange la chose, and he set to work. Le Vou toute Mademoiselle cried he. The girls rose, he made them all file off to another table. He then placed me at one extremity of the long bench, and having duly and carefully brought me my work basket, silk, scissors, all my implements, he fixed himself quite at the other end. At this arrangement, highly absurd as it was, not a soul in the room dared to laugh. Luckless for the giggler would have been the giggle. As for me, I took it with entire coolness. There I sat, isolated and cut off from human intercourse. I sat and minded my work and was quiet and not at all unhappy. Esse du distance, you demanded. Monsieur Etan La Pitre, said I, V savien que no sevu sevri se vidimance mois jenet mil. And with this assertion he commenced the reading. For his misfortune he had chosen a French translation of what he called Andram de William Shakespeare Le Faux Dieu. He further announced Du Pel How far otherwise? He would have characterized him had his temper not been upset, I nearly I scarcely need intimate. Of course the translation being French was very inefficient, nor did I make any particular effort to conceal the contempt which some of its forlorn lapses were calculated to excite, not that it behoved or beseemed me to say anything, but one can occasionally look the opinion it is forbidden to embody in words. Monsieur's Lunette being on the alert, he gleaned up every stray look. I don't think he lost one. The consequence was his eyes soon discarded a screen that their blaze might sparkle. Free, and he waxed hotter at the North Pole to which he had voluntary ex voluntarily exiled himself. Then, considering the general temperature of the room, it would have been reasonable to become under the vertical ray of cancer itself. The reading was over, it appeared problematic whether he would depart with his anger unexpressed or whether he would give it vent. Suppression was not much in his habits, but still, was what had been done to him definite enough to afford matter for overt reproof? I had not uttered a sound and could not justly be deemed amenable to reprimand or penalty for having permitted a slightly freer action than usual to the muscles about my eyes and mouth. The supper consisting of bread and milk diluted with tepid water was brought in. In respectful consideration of the professor's presence, the rolls and glasses were allowed to stand instead of being immediately handed round. Take your supper, ladies, said he, seeming to be occupied in making marginal notes in his William's Shakespeare. They took it. I also accepted a roll and a glass, but being now more than ever interested in my work, I kept my seat of punishment, and walked while I munched my bread and sipped my beverage, the whole with easy sangfo, with a certain smugness of composure, indeed, scarcely in my habits, and pleasantly novel to my feelings. It seemed as if the presence of a nature, so restless, chafing, thorny as that of Monsieur Poole, absorbed all feverish and unsettling influences like a magnet, and left me none but such as were placid and harmonious. He rose. Will he go away without saying another word? Yes, he turned to the door. No, he returned on his steps, but only perhaps to take his pencil case which had been left on the table. He took it, shut the pencil in and out, broke its point against the wood, recut and pocketed it, and walked promptly up to me. The girls and teachers gathered round the other table, were talking pretty freely. They always talked at meals, and, from the constant habit of speaking fast and loud at such times, did not now subdue their voices much. Monsieur Poole came and stood behind me. He asked at what I was working, and I said I was making a watch guard. He asked for whom? And I answered for a gentleman, one of my friends. Monsieur Poole stooped down and proceeded, as novel writers say, and as was literally true in his case, to hiss into my ear some poignant words. He said that of all the women he knew, I was the one who could make herself the most consummately unpleasant. I was she with whom it was least possible to live on friendly terms. I had a character entretable and perverse to a miracle. How I managed it or what possessed me he for his part did not know, but with whatever pacific and amicable intentions a person accosted me, crack, I turned concord to discord, good will to enity. He was sure he, Monsieur Poole, wished me well enough. He had never done me any harm that he knew of. He might at least, he supposed, claim a right to be regarded as a neutral acquaintance, guiltless of hostile sentiments. Yet how I behaved to him, with what pungent vivacities, what an impetus of mutiny, what a fugue of injustice. Here I could not avoid opening my eyes, somewhat wide, and even slipping into a slight interjectional observation. Vivacities impetus Foug I didn't know. Chute Alan Stance there, there I went. Vive Com la Pudre. He was sorry, he was very sorry for this for my sake. He grieved over the hapless pu peculiarity. This importement, this chaleur, generous, perhaps, but excessive, would yet, he feared, do me a mischief. It was a pity I was not, he believed in his soul, wholly without good qualities, and would I but hear reason and be more sedate, more sober, less enlair, less coquette, less taken by show, less prone to set an undue value on outside excellence, to make much of the attentions of people remarkable chiefly for so many feet of stature, des couleur de pupe a ne plus plus moins bien fe, and an enormous amount of fatuity I might yet prove a useful, perhaps an exemplary character, but as it was, and here the little man's voice was for a minute choked. I would have looked up at him or held out my hand or said a soothing word, but I was afraid if I stirred, I should either laugh or cry. So odd in all this was the mixture of the touching and the absurd. I thought he had nearly done, but no, he sat down that he might go on at his ease. While he, Monsieur Poole, was on these painful topics, he would dare my anger for the sake of my good, and would venture to refer to a change he had noticed in my dress. He was free to confess that when he first knew me, or rather was in the habit of catching a passing glimpse of me from time to time, I satisfied him on this point. The gravity, the austere simplicity, obvious in this particular, were such as to inspire the highest hopes for my best interests. What fatal influence had impelled me lately to introduce flowers under the brim of my bonnet, to wear descol borders, and even to appear on one occasion in a scarlet gown, he might indeed conjecture, but for the present would not openly declare. Again I interrupted, and this time not without an accent at once indignant and horror struck. Scarlet, Monsieur Poole. It was not scarlet, it was pink, a pale pink too, and further subdued by black lace. Pink or scarlet, yellow or crimson, pea green or sky blue, it was all one. These were all flaunting, giddy colours, and as to the lace I talked of, that was but a colli fichet deple, and he sighed over my degeneracy. He could not, he was sorry to say, be so particular on this theme as he could wish, not possessing the exact names of these babioles, that he might run into small verbal errors which would not fail to lay him open to my sarcasm and excite my unhappily sudden and passionate disposition. He would merely say in general terms, and in these general terms he knew he was correct, that my costume had of late assumed default mondane, which it wounded him to see. What façon mundane he discovered in my present winter merino and plain white collar, I own it puzzled me to guess, and when I asked him he said it was all made with too much attention to effect, and besides, had I not a bow of ribbon at my neck? And if you condemn a bow of ribbon for a lady, monsieur, you would necessarily disapprove of a thing like this for a gentleman, holding up my bright little chainlet of silk and gold. His sole reply was a groan, I suppose over my levity. After sitting some minutes in silence and watching the progress of the chain which I now wrought more assiduously than ever, he inquired whether what he had just said would have the effect of making me entirely detest him. I hardly remember what answer I made or how it came about. I don't think I spoke at all, but I know we managed to bid good night on friendly terms, and even after Monsieur Paul had reached the door, he turned back just to explain that he would not be understood to speak in entire condemnation of the scarlet dress. Pink, pink, I threw in, that he had no intention to deny it the merit of looking rather well. The fact was Monsieur Emmanuel's taste in colours decidedly leaned to the brilliant, only he wished to counsel me whenever I wore it to do so in the same spirit as if the material were bur and its hue gris de poussier. And the flowers under my bonnet, monsieur, I asked. They are very little ones. Keep them little, then, he said. Permit them not to become full blown. And the bow, monsieur, the bit of ribbon? Va polin was the propitious answer, and so we settled it. Well done, Lucy Snow, cried I to myself, you have come in for a pretty lecture, brought on yourself a rude savon, and all through your wicked fondness for worldly vanities, who would have thought it? You deemed yourself a melancholy sobersides enough. Miss Fanshaw there regards you as a second Diagin. Monsieur de Bassompierre the other day politely turned the conversation when it ran on the wild gifts of the actress Vashti, because, as he kindly said, Miss Snow looked uncomfortable. Dr. John Breton knows you only as quiet Lucy, a creature inoffensive as a shadow, he has said, and you have heard him say it. Lucy's disadvantages spring from over gravity in tastes and manner, want of colour in character. And costume such are your own and your friend's impressions, and behold, there starts up a little man differing diametrically from all these, roundly, charging you with being too airy and cheery, too volatile and versatile, too flowery and coloury. This harsh little man, this pitiless censor, gathers up all your poor scattered sins of vanity, your luckless chiffon of rose colour, your small fringe of a wreath, your scrap of ribbon, your silly little bit of lace, and calls you to account for the lot and for each item. You are well habituated to be passed by as a shadow in life's sunshine. It is a new thing to see one testily living his lifting his hand to screen his eyes, because you tease him with an obtrusive ray. The next chapter is chapter twenty nine Monsieur's fate and it starts. I was up the next morning an hour before daybreak and finished my guard, kneeling on the dormitory floor beside the centre stand for the benefit of such expiring glimmer as the night lamp afforded in its last watch. And I'm going to leave it there, and tomorrow I hope, I pray I'll have the opportunity to explain my silence, and it's now one forty AM, but I just wanted to get something recorded, so you know I haven't forgotten you. Thanks so much for joining me and lots of love. Good night.
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