The Golden Lion of Granpere eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 267 pages of information about The Golden Lion of Granpere.

The Golden Lion of Granpere eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 267 pages of information about The Golden Lion of Granpere.

M. le Cure Gondin, as he was generally called at Granpere,—­being always so spoken of, with his full name and title, by the large Protestant portion of the community,—­was a man very much respected by all the neighbourhood.  He was respected by the Protestants because he never interfered with them, never told them, either behind their backs or before their faces, that they would be damned as heretics, and never tried the hopeless task of converting them.  In his intercourse with them he dropped the subject of religion altogether,—­as a philologist or an entomologist will drop his grammar or his insects in his intercourse with those to whom grammar and insects are matters of indifference.  And he was respected by the Catholics of both sorts,—­by those who did not and by those who did adhere with strictness to the letter of their laws of religion.  With the former he did his duty, perhaps without much enthusiasm.  He preached to them, if they would come and listen to him.  He christened them, confessed them, and absolved them from their sins,- -of course, after due penitence.  But he lived with them, too, in a friendly way, pronouncing no anathemas against them, because they were not as attentive to their religious exercises as they might have been.  But with those who took a comfort in sacred things, who liked to go to early masses in cold weather, to be punctual at ceremonies, to say the rosary as surely as the evening came, who knew and performed all the intricacies of fasting as ordered by the bishop, down to the refinement of an egg more or less, in the whole Lent, or the absence of butter from the day’s cookery,—­with these he had all that enthusiasm which such people like to encounter in their priest.  We may say, therefore, that he was a wise man,—­and probably, on the whole, a good man; that he did good service in his parish, and helped his people along in their lives not inefficiently.  He was a small man, with dark hair very closely cut, with a tonsure that was visible but not more than visible; with a black beard that was shaved every Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday evenings, but which was very black indeed on the Tuesday and Friday mornings.  He always wore the black gown of his office, but would go about his parish with an ordinary soft slouch hat,—­thus subjecting his appearance to an absence of ecclesiastical trimness which, perhaps, the most enthusiastic of his friends regretted.  Madame Voss certainly would have wished that he would have had himself shaved at any rate every other day, and that he would have abstained from showing himself in the streets of Granpere without his clerical hat.  But, though she was very intimate with her Cure, and had conferred upon him much material kindness, she had never dared to express her opinion to him upon these matters.

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The Golden Lion of Granpere from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.