Les Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 2/Book 6/Chapter 7: Difference between revisions

m
no edit summary
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 1:
<noinclude>{{work}}</noinclude>==== CHAPTER VII—Some Silhouettes of this Darkness ====
 
==== CHAPTER VII—Some Silhouettes of this Darkness ====
 
During the six years which separate 1819 from 1825, the prioress of the Petit-Picpus was Mademoiselle de Blemeur, whose name, in religion, was Mother Innocente. She came of the family of Marguerite de Blemeur, author of Lives of the Saints of the Order of Saint-Benoît. She had been re-elected. She was a woman about sixty years of age, short, thick, “singing like a cracked pot,” says the letter which we have already quoted; an excellent woman, moreover, and the only merry one in the whole convent, and for that reason adored. She was learned, erudite, wise, competent, curiously proficient in history, crammed with Latin, stuffed with Greek, full of Hebrew, and more of a Benedictine monk than a Benedictine nun.
Line 24 ⟶ 22:
 
Such was this curious house.
 
 
<noinclude>----
:<small>Back to ''[[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]''</small></noinclude>