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Sebastian at home - Lord Marchmain abroad
77 Limbo
a theoretical concept in some reaches of Catholic
theology. It is the place where puzzled theologians placed those unbaptised
souls which had had no chance to know and love Christ, e.g. babies and perhaps
people who lived before Christ. They are neither in Heaven nor in Hell. Charles
is thinking of the heroes from ancient mythologies who must reside here if
anywhere after death.
Limbo has never been a defined article of Catholic
faith. An International Theological Commission reporting to Pope Benedict XVI
in October 2006 recommended its disappearance as a hypothesis from Catholic
theology. The Commission stated that, while no one can be certain of the fate
of unbaptised babies who die, Christians can and should trust that God will
welcome them into Heaven. Presumably the same principle should apply more
widely, to those born before Christ and those in our own world who hear nothing
of the message of salvation; but the Commission appears not to have commented
on them.
77 Beatific Vision
the exquisite contemplation of the glory of God
in Heaven
77 box-edged
It was, and is, common in larger English gardens to
edge walks and garden beds with very low hedges of plants like box, a dense
evergreen shrub with dark green leaves. There is a description of the use of
box a few paragraphs on.
77 alpine strawberries
a variety of wild strawberry (Fragaria
vesca) that can in fact be easily grown in English gardens. Though smaller
than modern cultivated strawberries, they have a succulent flavour. They fruit
all the growing season, and can come in white and yellow shades as well as
red.
77 succession of hot-houses
On larger estates one commonly comes
across a number of hot-houses (General Tilney in Jane Austens
Northanger Abbey calls them succession-houses). They have
different, strictly controlled temperatures to allow for the transfer of plants
(generally fruit and flowers) from one to another to give them a congenial
environment for their present stage of growth, or to gradually prepare them for
life in the open air. Some of the plants, of course, remained in a particular
hot-house all the time because that climate was always suitable.
78 Inigo Jones
English architect (1573-1652) who introduced to
Britain the classical architecture of the late Italian Renaissance, in Britain
called Palladianism. He was also responsible for the creation of
the elaborate court masques of the Jacobean period.
78 Soanesque
Sir John Soane (1753-1837), English architect, was
the last major British exponent of the Neo-Classical or Palladian style before
the age of Victoria. His style was very popular and has now come back into
favour. He was the architect of the Bank of England.
78 pagodas ... mandarins
A pagoda is a Buddhist temple with a
series of successively smaller projecting roofs for each storey. In Britain it
was thought of as characteristically Chinese.
Rooms in Chinese style were
very popular in 18th century English decor, and became part of a fashion called
chinoiserie. The pagodas were probably part of the design of the wallpaper,
luxury rolls of which were bought from China itself as early as the 17th
century. Certainly the wallpaper would have Chinese landscape, figures and
motifs.
Nodding mandarins were quite popular figures in the eighteenth
century and were manufactured into the twentieth : they had articulated heads
and hands, and often tongues!
The Chinese Drawing Room is where Lord
Marchmain will die towards the end of the novel. He describes a mandarin figure
in his long speech just before his death (page 316).
78 Chippendale
Thomas Chippendale (1718-1779), an English
furniture designer and cabinet-maker. He was the designer who most popularised
chinoiserie in Britain. In 1754 Chippendale published The Gentleman and
Cabinet Makers Director, a book of engraved designs which in Britain
acted as the general pattern-book for the age.
78 balustrade
a railing, usually decorative
78 colonnade
an open passageway with columns
78 arabesques
an intricate design with many elements, especially
curves
78 fountain ... piazza
Italy had many classical and rococo
fountains in public squares. In England at the same period it was not the
custom to build fountains (as opposed to drinking troughs). In the 18th
century, English connoisseurs liked to buy Italian fountains and erect them at
home as a centrepiece of their formal gardens. We learn later that
Bridesheads fountain was transported from Naples in the days of
Nelson.
79 camelopards
early name for giraffes. Their representation in
the Baroque period was approximate.
79 pediment
A pediment is the broad triangular face of a building
on top of a colonnade. It might be decorated.
79 Piranesi
Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778), Italian
architect and engraver, famous for his views of Rome. They have a heavy, wild,
romantic feel to them. (See some of
Piranesis
engravings.)
79 rubbing brasses
A favourite occupation of artistic schoolboys
in England at this time. Many English churches have engraved brass tablets on
floors and walls which celebrate dead worthies, some of them with splendid
images. With a stick of coloured wax (usually black) and a large sheet of
suitable paper, one can produce a copy of the image.
79 Ruskin
John Ruskin (1819-1900), English critic, artist and
writer with a splendid style, who had a large influence upon public taste in
art in Victorian England. Ruskin took a strict view of high art, judging its
value by estimating its faithfulness to nature and its avoidance of
self-indulgence in sensuality. He was therefore the man who created the
standard Victorian responses to art and linked art with utility and morality in
the publics mind, though he himself deplored such simple
equations.
EW may have had in mind the celebrated court case when
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) sued for damages after Ruskin accused
him in an article of being a coxcomb flinging a pot of paint in the
publics face. Ruskin was referring to Whistlers painting
Nocturne in Black and Gold : The Falling
Rocket, today an acknowledged masterpiece. Whistler received token
damages of one farthing (a quarter of a penny) after Ruskin was too ill to
appear in court to defend his accusation. EW was actually fully in sympathy
with Ruskin, as he made clear in a 1956 article.
79 Baroque
in the 1920s and for many years after, a very
much derided style and period. The word implies contortion, which is how the
critics of the style thought of it in its own time (16th-18th centuries). It
appeals directly to the senses, often very dramatically and even excessively.
The English Baroque (perhaps from around 1660 to 1750) was on the other hand a
very much more formalised and classical style than Continental Baroque - think
of Saint Pauls Cathedral and Castle Howard.
79 coffered
This was a characteristic of some eighteenth century
and earlier architecture. A ceiling was coffered when it had sunken panels,
usually rectangular and regular.
79 broken pediments
These pediments are not damaged; their design
means that they are not fully triangular, because a symmetrical segment has
been deliberately left out of the angle which points up towards the sky. In
other forms of broken pediment, the base line might be interrupted.
80 japanned
covered with a lacquer that gives a shiny black
finish
80 dead aloes
Aloes is a succulent plant with many varieties
originally from Africa and Asia but successfully introduced into the
Mediterranean region in pre-Christian times. It can be grown in favourable
micro-climates in southern Britain but is susceptible to frost. A neglected
plant, as this appears to be, would not easily survive.
80 Rococo
a style of intricate, pretty and often excessive
ornamentation which was the final development of the baroque spirit in 18th
century Europe
80 groined
a groin is the curved edge between vaulted sections. So
we know that this room is vaulted.
80 fête champêtre with a ribboned swing
A
fête champêtre is a painting in which the artist depicts a
group of people enjoying themselves in the countryside. French painters of the
18th century like Fragonard, Watteau and Lancret were adept in the genre.
Indeed a lady on a swing is the centrepiece of one of Fragonards most
celebrated paintings, The Swing (1766), which Sebastian is no doubt
thinking of. He appears to want an imitation. No wonder Charles is unable to
fulfil the request.
80 a Negro page
In both France and Britain black servants were a
distinguished addition to a household in the 18th century. What appears to 21st
century minds to be insufferable condescension actually meant that many black
men and women led lives of considerable quality and esteem.
80 pastiche
an imitation of the style of another artist or age,
here of French 18th century painting
81 transept
Though usually employed in the description of church
architecture, the term here suggests a side-room off the main cellar.
81 vintages fifty years old
This figure indicates that the oldest
wines date from before 1873. They are almost certainly wines made before the
phylloxera outbreak changed vine-growing in Europe for ever.
Phylloxera is
an American vine root louse that was accidentally transported to England in
1863. From there it spread to the continent with considerable speed and within
twenty years had infected almost all of Europe. The French were particularly
slow to take counter-action, the only reasonably successful measure being to
use resistant root-stock from America, a policy which horrified French
viticulturists with their entrenched ideas of vinous purity.
Connoisseurs
undoubtedly agreed that wines made in pre-phylloxera days were superior to
later ones. Even today there are occasional wine tastings when wines now 120 or
more years old are tested against later vintages and found to be
superb.
81 the eighteens and the twenties
i.e. wines made in 1918 and
1920. These, especially the 1918, were good vintages and could be expected to
mature for many years. Wilcox obviously still keeps his ear to the
ground.
81 my stay in many barren years
This is an intriguing reference to
years about which we know little. This phrase is a hint that Charles relied on
wine to console himself in times of unhappiness or frustration. Possibly these
times were the period when he was unhappily married to Celia, and later the
years after his departure from Brideshead. Unlike Sebastian, Charles is able to
use alcohol to add quality to his life - a distinction that Cara quickly
notices.
81 a book on wine-tasting
The instructions of this guide are
frequently recommended today.
81 Bath Oliver biscuits
a biscuit which does little to satisfy
hunger but is suitable for wine tasting because of its neutral taste.
(Actually, I think they are delicious.) They are still commercially available
today, made according to a secret recipe. Dr William Oliver of Bath is said to
have invented them in the mid-eighteenth century as an alternative to another
of his inventions, the Bath Bun, which was so delicious his patients tended to
gain rather than lose weight while on their health cures.
82 county cricket
Perhaps the one flaw in the perfection of
characterisation of the two boys is their indifference to cricket. This is not
the place to expand on the joys of a game which will be uncongenial to people
who expect their sports to consist of continual adrenal bursts. It must in
honesty be admitted that not even all Englishmen appreciate crickets
exquisitely extended excitements. The senior game in England is organised into
a league (from 2000, two leagues) based on teams from counties.
82 Tennyson
Ones mind boggles. This is not the great poet
who is gracing the cricket field, however; he died in 1892. This is his
grandson, the Honourable Lionel Tennyson (1889-1951), later third Baron
Tennyson, who was famous for his hard hitting. In a low period for English
cricket, he was considered inspiring enough to captain England against
Australia in 1921; he played in a total of nine test matches. His career was
unfortunately interrupted by World War I, in which he was twice wounded. 58 is
a good but not a great score for an individual in a cricket match.
My
favourite story about Tennyson (who, unlike his grandfather, was basically
illiterate) is his comment when a Hampshire colleague tried unsuccessfully to
hoick a straight ball over the leg boundary. Bloody fool, he said,
bowled by a ball he should have left alone. Cricket aficionados will
appreciate that one.
82 induction
formal installation into an office
82 Ampleforth
The great Benedictine Abbey and School in Yorkshire.
Its abbots have been eminent men; the late Cardinal Hume was abbot before he
became Archbishop of Westminster.
82 against Lancashire
One of the first class counties in the
Cricket Championship. Father Phipps is obviously talking about a match played
by Yorkshire against Lancashire, always a bitterly fought contest. Tennyson
played for Hampshire.
83 not an old-established centre of Catholicism
Since EW could
easily have made the Flyte family into old Catholics (see note to
page 89), this choice is interesting
though its significance is difficult to judge. EW was himself a convert to
Catholicism; this fact may lie behind his perception of the existence of
a twitch upon the thread.
83 little grey church at the gates
This is the parish church of
the majority faith of the area, the Church of England. It seems to be an
ancient foundation as the Flyte family had its tombs there; it may predate
Brideshead itself by several centuries.
83 Sebastians faith was an enigma to me
See my comments in
the Preface.
83 Divinity
the name given to the subject of Religious Education
in some schools and most universities.
83 to die of exhaustion in the snow
For pedants, there is some
interest in the manner of Mrs Ryders death. Here she dies of exhaustion;
in Charles Ryders Schooldays, written in 1946, she is killed by a
German shell. It is not clear why the shell should be German; it was the
Austrians who were fighting the Serbs in Bosnia, though it appears that many of
their munitions were sourced from Germany. Perhaps this was a garbled and
romanticised version that Charles as a schoolboy allowed to lodge in his mind,
and the account in BR is the accurate one.
Equally, we could just ignore
Charles Ryders Schooldays. There is no evidence that EW wanted to
publish it at all. He may even have forgotten it by the time he came to recast
this paragraph in his revision of BR in the late 1950s.
84 Im very, very much wickeder
Perhaps surprisingly,
Sebastians self-condemnation can easily be justified from the text if one
has a strict view of sin.
84 Who was it used to pray, O God, make me good, but not
yet?
Probably Sebastian has misremembered Da mihi castitatem
et continentiam, sed noli modo - Give me chastity and
continence - but not yet, which appears in the Confessions of
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354-430).
84 News of the World
a Sunday newspaper whose chief
attraction then (and for many years after) was the account of court cases of a
lubricous character which were reported coyly in terms which encouraged, but
left much to, the imagination. The paper still exists and is popular, but many
would now class its content as openly pornographic.
84 naughty scoutmaster
undoubtedly a reference to a court case
involving pederasty
84 change the weather
EW himself seems to have believed that this
was possible. He used to ask a commmunity of Poor Clare nuns to pray for
specific purposes and, according to members of his family, the holy ladies were
always successful. On one occasion he asked them to pray for fine weather for a
fete being held in his grounds on behalf of the local parish and the sun shone
for the two hours of the fete though there was rain for the rest of the
day.
84 St Anthony of Padua
a very popular saint (1195-1231) to pray to
if you want to find something youve mislaid
84 Canterbury Gate
one of the
entrances into Christ Church College, built 1772-1788. It leads into
Canterbury Quad.
85 using an instrument
a cant phrase in the newspaper for the
tools of the trade of abortion, then an illegal vocation
86 Stonyhurst
prominent Jesuit school in Lancashire.
86 the Guards
the most prestigious regiments in the Army, charged
with guarding the monarch. A man with a title should at that time have had
little trouble in securing a commission in a regiment of the Guards.
86 House of Commons
As the son of a peer Brideshead is eligible to
stand for Parliament and take his seat in the House of Commons if elected. His
father could not do so because he already has his own seat in the House of
Lords.
87 excommunicated
Lord Marchmain has not been publicly denounced
by the Pope or his bishop, as some think; he has merely been excluded by his
own actions from receiving communion in church. He can put things right by an
act of sorrow and amendment, which is what he does do at the end of his
life.
87 at least four cliques
It is interesting to speculate of whom
Sebastian is thinking. An idle line of thought suggests that one clique could
be the English of recusant origin, a second those who descend from Irish
immigrants; a third could be the ultramontanes, i.e. those who were more papal
than the Pope (very strong in the 1920s), and a fourth those who adopt a
liberal or modern attitude.
87 Francis Xavier
Cordelias pig is named after Saint Francis
Xavier (1506-1552), missioner to India, Japan and (when he died) prospectively
to China. He was one of the great missionaries of the modern age and seems to
have achieved his successes by charisma rather than catechesis.
87 special mention
This is only a consolation prize in the world
of agricultural shows.
88 Magdalen
an old, distinguished college at Oxford. The name is
pronounced like maudlin.
88 Enfant de Marie
Known more commonly in England as the Children
of Mary, this organisation exists to help children and young adults sanctify
their lives with acts of devotion and minor self-sacrifice.
89 obedience
Brideshead is pointing out to Cordelia that her fault
was not one of pettifogging rule breaking but of defiance - far more
serious.
89 atheist
agnostic
The difference is that an atheist
positively asserts that there is no God whereas an agnostic just does not know
if there is one. It is not clear that Charles has thought seriously about the
matter at all.
89 Bishop in London
Not Bishop of London. That
particular bishop is a senior prelate in the Church of England. This one, who
must be Catholic, merely met Bridey in London. He is certainly the Bishop of
Clifton, who had authority in Wiltshire; his name was George Ambrose
Burton.
89 Blessed Sacrament
As explained earlier, this is the body of
Christ under the appearance of bread. It is placed in the tabernacle on the
altar or reserved in a side chapel. Since Brideshead Chapel is (at this time
and again during the war) used for Catholic services, the Sacrament is always
present.
89 old Catholics
Catholic families who
maintained the faith through penal times, when one could be punished for doing
so. Landowners whose families had remained Catholic since the sixteenth century
frequently had a large band of loyal estate workers and neighbours who also
maintained the old religion in the district. This was not the case here. The
Flytes were not old Catholics. It was the Marchioness of Marchmain,
Sebastians mother, who brought Catholicism to the family with her
marriage - she is however a member of an old Catholic family.
89 Probably in eighty years it will be greatly admired.
Indeed it
is : art nouveau is now very much sought after.
90 But is there a difference between liking a thing and thinking it
good?
It is remarkable that Bridey has passed through Stonyhurst and Oxford
and apparently not debated this basic question. EW thus brings his narrowness
to our attention (as well as, soon, Sebastians impatience with
intellectual discussion). I suppose it is possible that Bridey is merely
keeping the conversation going.
90 Jesuitical
i.e. thinking and acting like a Jesuit, a member of
the Society of Jesus, a Catholic order of missionaries and educators famous for
their educational expertise, social influence and subtlety of reasoning. Since
to argue with them was to lead one into thickets of logic, ethics and religion
where very few were skilled, jesuitical came to mean adept in
entanglement and ambiguity, especially in Protestant countries.
90 a whole rosary
Just a decade
A
rosary is generally understood to mean a system of prayers based on a chaplet.
This has 55 beads (though the 55th may be a medallion link), with, usually,
five further beads joining the link to a crucifix. The chaplets main
beads are divided into five sections known as decades.
In using the phrase
whole rosary, Cordelia certainly means a complete traverse of the
chaplet, then and today commonly called the rosary (though you can still
buy a complete 15-decade rosary with 165+5 beads and a crucifix - one sometimes
saw them around the waists of nuns).
During one circuit you meditate upon
one of three sets of mysteries associated with the lives of Jesus and Mary.
These three sets are :
| The Joyful Mysteries | The Sorrowful Mysteries | The Glorious Mysteries | |
| 1 | The Angel Gabriels Announcement to Mary | The Agony in the Garden | The Resurrection of Jesus |
| 2 | Marys Visit to Saint Elizabeth | The Scourging of Jesus | The Ascension of Jesus into Heaven |
| 3 | The Birth of Jesus Christ | The Crowning with Thorns | The Coming of the Holy Spirit |
| 4 | The Presentation of Jesus at the Temple | Jesus Carrying the Cross | The Assumption of Mary into Heaven |
| 5 | The Finding of Jesus at the Temple | The Crucifixion and Death of Jesus | The Coronation of Mary in Heaven |
For each of these mysteries you say a Pater Noster (Our Father), ten
Aves (Hail Mary) and one Gloria Patri (Glory be to the Father). Since one bead
is used both to end one decade and to begin the next, eleven beads are devoted
to each decade. That is why there are 55 main beads in the loop of the rosary.
There are also introductory and concluding prayers which may vary according to
the season or the part of the world.
In 2002 Pope John Paul II added a
fourth set of mysteries to the rosary, introducing the first radical change for
several hundred years. These new mysteries fill the gap between the childhood
and passion of Jesus and deal with his ministry. They are called the Luminous
Mysteries (or Mysteries of Light) and consist of : the Baptism of the Lord in
the Jordan; the Wedding at Cana; the Proclamation of the Kingdom of God and the
Call to Conversion; the Transfiguration of Our Lord; and the Institution of the
Eucharist (Holy Communion). I have not yet seen a twenty-decade rosary chaplet
to cover all four sets of mysteries!
The fact that a devout child like
Cordelia can allow only a decade a week to each of her intentions is testimony
to her wide-ranging sympathies. One certainly expects her to get round a whole
chaplet at least once a day (five decades and so five intentions) - after all
she would do it once in the chapel in the evening (see page 125) - and probably
three times a day (fifteen intentions) to make the complete rosary. If the
latter, a weeks worth would be over a hundred intentions.
A decade
takes perhaps three or four minutes to say if one does not gabble too much and
truly meditates on the meaning of each mystery, though it must be admitted that
many Catholics do rush through it.
91 Lloyd George
David Lloyd George (1863-1945) was Prime Minister
of Great Britain from 1916 to 1922, and so was in office when World War I was
won. The Conservatives in the Government coalition got rid him in 1922 as
rumours of his bribery and moral excesses began to take hold in the country and
restiveness at his prolonged ministry and unpopular policies increased.
91 the Kaiser
Wilhelm (William) II (1859-1941), Emperor of Germany
and King of Prussia from 1888 to 1918, was the main loser in World War I. He
lost his throne and had to live in exile in the Netherlands for the rest of his
life.
91 to buy a black god-daughter
Patronising as it may appear now,
this action represents the first stirrings of practical charity among lay
Catholics in Britain towards the developing countries of the world.
91 five bob
i.e. five shillings, a quarter of £1 (=25p
today). The derivation of the term bob is obscure.
91 You take art as a means not as an end.
Bridey is returning to
their discussion on the difference between liking a thing and thinking it good.
He is pointing out that Charless words betray a proper distinction
between objective and subjective judgements. Charles can distinguish between
his own reactions to an art object and a more universal evaluation of it.
Bridey would have expected Charles to judge the chapel bad because he disliked
it.
Bridey makes the theological link because he himself has been taught at
Stonyhurst to make a clear distinction between the status of an object (which
may be good and therefore desirable) and the status of the means by which one
pursues that object (which may be good or bad).
91 novena
a scheme of prayers offered on nine days in succession
in order to petition for a particular purpose
91 causing scandal
a consequence always to be avoided.
Scandal in ecclesiastical terms is a word or action that occasions or
seeks anothers spiritual ruin, and is therefore in itself evil. Here
Bridey fears that the light way in which the family appears to be talking of
their religion might act as a barrier to Charless understanding or
acceptance of it.
91 travel third
Rail travel in Britain in 1923 was divided into
two classes - first and third. Second class travel had disappeared in the early
years of the century, mainly because public and parliamentary demand required
that the standards of the third class should be improved until they were
indistinguishable from second class. (Originally third-class passengers had sat
on planks of wood in carriages open to the weather.) In 1956 third class
was renamed second class.
92 Lotti
an hotel in the Rue de Castiglione in Paris
92 Foyots
one of the superb restaurants which were common in
Paris. It was located just across from the Senate building, so senators and
businessmen patronised it. On occasion it was a centre for student activity,
often revolutionary. The restaurant was later destroyed in order to enlarge the
street.
92 Gare de Lyon
the railway terminus in Paris for trains
going to the Riviera and the south. The famous Blue Train departed from here at
that time, but now, I understand, departs from the Gare Austerlitz.
Nevertheless the Blue Train restaurant is still worth visiting at the Gare de
Lyon.
92 Orvieto
a light white Italian wine.
92 valet
pronounced at that time (and also today if you want to be
correct) with the t
92 gondola
Lord Marchmain has his own boat and gondoliers, as
their livery shows.
92 vaporetto
a type of water-bus designed for the canals of
Venice. (Nevertheless vaporetti cause considerable damage to the Venetian
environment.)
93 Palazzo. Pronto. Si, signore
Plender.
The palace, quickly. Yes, Mr
Plender.
93 Ecco ci siamo, signori.
Here we are,
gentlemen.
93 Palladian
a classical style of architecture developed by the
Italian architect Andrea Palladio (1508-1580) in an earlier form than the
English baroque on display at Brideshead.
93 rusticated stone
The stones making the wall are bevelled and so
appear to have deep channels between them.
93 piano nobile
(Italian: noble floor). In
architecture, this is the main floor of a Renaissance building, usually on the
storey immediately above the ground floor. The rooms on this level are
elegantly decorated.
93 school of Tintoretto
Jacopo Robusti (1518-1594), who was proud
of his nickname Tintoretto (the little dyer), was a
superb Venetian painter of dramatic effects. He had a vast influence on a set
of unoriginal followers.
93 Mostica
mosquitoes. EW seems to have made this
mock-Italian word up and given it to the butler to say as a failed attempt to
find the correct English word. Until recently I thought it might be an uncommon
dialect word cognate with the French (moustique), but it appears not to
be so. The Italian word for mosquito is zanzara.
93 bulbous press
A press is a shelved cupboard that is big
enough to take bed linen. This one is obviously a free one made by a skilled
cabinet-maker, as he has expended some energy in giving it an individual form.
The bulbous quality usually refers to the legs (or supporters in other kinds of
furniture e.g. bed posters). Each of them would have been turned to create a
massive globe or bulb in their design which might then be heavily decorated by
carving. It is conceivable that the whole piece is bulbous : I have seen such
furniture in collections.
93 Si, si, subito, signori.
Yes yes,
immediately, gentlemen.
94 Il marchese
The
marquess.
94 bêtise
ridiculous mistake
(French)
95 Brenta
a river and canal in Veneto, the province surrounding
Venice
95 the Luna
the oldest hotel in Venice, centrally placed in the
city
95 red damask
The walls are covered with a fine patterned fabric.
Damask designs generally have a continuous floral or geometric pattern. Damask
fabrics first became popular in Europe during the fifteenth century and were
used for furniture and walls during the 17th and 18th centuries.
95 gilt gesso
This is a mixture of plaster and glue, often
used to prepare a canvas for painting. Here it is used to create architectural
and decorative effects, and is covered with a golden surface.
95 Bellini
As Lord Marchmain explains, the Bellinis were a
talented family of painters. Generally considered the greatest was Giovanni (c.
1430-1516), who brought Venetian painting to the forefront of Renaissance art.
He was the son of Jacopo and brother of Gentile Bellini.
96 a great stumbling-block to my own party
Lord Marchmain is
clearly a Conservative; he would call himself a Tory. Since the Conservatives
attempted to maintain the structure of society as it had developed through the
ages, any lord who did not take his responsibilities seriously would do damage
not only to the interests of the upper class and the Conservative party but
also to the fabric of society, exposing the Tories to adverse comment and
criticism.
96 Florians
a famous Venetian café on the Piazza San
Marco, open since 1720. The interior now has plush seating and art nouveau
decor.
96 campanile
the famous freestanding
bell
tower of Saint Marks Cathedral in Venice. It had recently been
rebuilt (completed 1912) after collapsing entirely in 1902 with the loss only
of the caretakers cat.
96 Anarchists
An anarchist rejects governments and works for their
abolition, sometimes violently. Anarchism was strong in Italy before the advent
of Fascism in 1922.
97 Toulouse-Lautrec
The French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
(1864-1901) was famous for his portraits and especially for those he painted
for posters of various nightlife haunts in Paris.
97 odalisque
technically a woman of the harem, but the term was
used in painting for a woman of some sexual allure in a genre in which the
Turkish elements may have been reduced to insignificance
97 little bit of fluff
This surprisingly vulgar term
from EW emphasises the gap between expectation and reality in Charless
mind.
97 Vittoria Corombona
a name which EW probably picked up from
Websters The White Devil. This play was based on a real character
in 16th century Italy. As presented in the play, Vittoria is a feisty lady
fighting for her right to self-expression. Though guilty of adultery and
murder, in a world of utter confusion and immorality she is much better than
her enemies and tormentors, who present their actions as the defence of
religion and morality.
97 Alex has not once let me inside San Marco even.
This is a
telling point : it indicates Lord Marchmains strong desire not to give
religion a chance. San Marco (Saint Marks) is the great cathedral
of Venice.
98 Chioggia
a seaport at the south end of the Lagoon of Venice.
The night was Byronic possibly because Lord Byron once famously swam the length
of the Grand Canal after an evening of drinking; I have no knowledge that he
spent any time fishing for scampi, but in a letter to John Murray from Venice
(1st February 1819) he wrote, Within this last fortnight I have been rather
indisposed with a rebellion of stomach, which would retain nothing, (liver, I
suppose,) and an inability, or fantasy, not to be able to eat of any thing with
relish but a kind of Adriatic fish called scampi, which happens to
be the most indigestible of marine viands. However, within these last two days,
I am better, and very truly yours.
98 prosciutto
an Italian smoked ham served cold and in
slices
98 Harrys bar
EW has committed an anachronism here, one of
only two that I have found. Harrys Bar just off Saint Marks Square
was opened only in 1931. In the first edition of BR he just wrote English
bar. The bar, which was intended originally to be an hotel bar, was opened
by Giuseppe Cipriani with money supplied by a young American called Harry
Pickering, hence the name.
98 Colleoni statue
Bartolomeo Colleoni (1400c-1475) was an
able mercenary soldier who became general of the Venetian state. The
equestrian
statue erected in his memory (1488) was designed by Andrea del Verrocchio
(1435c-1488) and made by Alessandro Leopardi (fl. 1492-1523).
98 you and I can never possibly get involved in a
war
Sebastians words show how far the youth of the period regretted
not being old enough to have fought in World War I, a yearning EW himself
certainly felt. Of course Sebastians words are to be contradicted by
events.
98 Grand Canal
Lord Marchmains palazzo is superbly
placed on the main waterway of Venice.
98 I could not take her amiss
This phrase could mean either that
Charles could not fail to understand her implication of a sexual relationship,
or that he could not be offended by her easy frankness.
99 milord
As Caras words go on to reveal, this word
encapsulates the caricature of the English lord held by many
continentals.
100 Charing Cross
one of the London railway terminuses. It serves
the south coast of England and therefore travellers from the continent of
Europe. Charing Cross was the last of a series of memorials erected in 1290 to
mark the resting places of the body of Queen Eleanor, wife of King Edward I, on
its way to burial in London. The present memorial is a later, inaccurate
reconstruction. Three others remain at Waltham Cross, Geddington and
Hardingstone.
100 Marchers
Sebastians slang for Marchmain
House, the familys London home
100 across the park
We know that Marchmain House is in Saint
Jamess (page 56), which is
the prestigious area between Buckingham Palace and Whitehall, and that Charles
lives in Bayswater (page 64), so the
park is almost certainly Hyde Park, which lies between the two, though Charles
might, if he were walking, go through Green Park first. No doubt the taxi took
the route via Piccadilly and Park Lane.
We know from the first edition of BR
that the Ryder house is in Hyde Park Gardens, a small road lying just behind
Bayswater Road on the north side of Hyde Park itself.
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