The Queen Pedauque
shop-I turn the Spit and learn to
Ménétrier, kept a cookshop at the sign of Queen Pédauque, wh
f Saint Catherine, not far from the Little Bacchus, the gate of which, decorated with vine branches, was at the corner of the Rue des Cordiers. He loved me v
d that one has eaten him, and the little Riquiqui had nothing at all. Sauce, sauce
ff to sleep, and my mother used to affirm that the smi
holidays the banner of the Cooks' Guild, on which a fine-looking St Lauren
ther is a holy a
urch every Sunday with a prayer-book printed in big type. She could har
t? the hurdy-gurdy player and Catherine the lacemaker were regular frequenters. And every time he re
just said to the limping cutler: '
eadjusting his apron, with him alway
smallest morsel of turkey or goose. He was always satisfied to lick the roaster as his wage. But he is getting old. His legs are getting stiff; he can't see, and is no m
nd wagged his tail as a sign of
y heart some grammar or morality book, or those fine maxims of the Old and New Testaments. And that because the knowledge of God and the distinction between good and e
my father, taught me how to spell. He did so the more willingly as my father, who had a consideration for knowledge, paid for his lesson with a savoury morsel of roast turkey and a large glass of
, he sat down at my side, and, warming his naked feet on the hot
sage, net
femmes
itié d
l of noble appearance, clad in the ecclesiastical habi
mouth was laughing and his eyes were sprightly, his cheeks were somewhat heavy and his three chins drop
y profession, lifted h
to warm yourself near the fire, I'll
priest took a seat near the fire
good friar r
sage, net
femnies e
his hands
A Capuchin who is able to read! Eh
worthy Capuchin,"
om the upper room descended to t
with an already famil
istress; Friar Ange is a Cap
all sorts of writing
of St Margaret by the picture representing the mai
te sufficient, when in labour-pains, to apply it like a plaster on the place where the most pain is felt and it operates just as
ison of St Margaret is sovereign for what you mentioned, but un
mother had filled up for him and, throwing his wallet over
of bread, a flagon of wine and a knife, the copper handle of which represented the
rned round on my father and asked for some salt, rather sur
salt as a sign of hospitality. They also placed salt
the wooden shoe which was hung on the mantelpiec
ll repasts, and held it in so high esteem that they metaphoric
ncients may have valued it, the exci
le she knitted a woollen sto
f the babies held over the christening font. When my Jacques felt the salt on his tongue he made a gri
looked on m
y is painted on his features and he reads
' which Friar Ange has given him, and the history of that fellow who has been devoured, in
ured into the priest's ear that I learned anything
o be, is one of the honours of mankind, the consolation of human life and a remedy agai
eem, and am quite willing to believe that it also is, as your reverence say
replied the priest; "but it gives some solace,
r bonnet sideways over her ear and her neckerchief very much creased.
pots without paying for them, so as not to go contrary to the rules of St Francis, he said. But the worst of it is, that he, seeing me in company under the arbour, came near me to teach me a new prayer. I told him it was not the
a stool with which he struck anyone approaching him, this vile taverner swore like a real devil and called for the watch. Monsieur M
d. He said plainly that he could not find any excuse for the Capuchin, and that he wished him to get a good punish
d up in
the tavern to play the deuce with some ill-famed creatures, depraved enough to prefer the company o
ays on my mother, who, standing up at the entry to the stair
by this unfriendly
say a good word to the t
tell them to take the
and laughed, "the cu
father sharply. "A ragamuffin
s true, really true, that h
e shop, shaking
nd to the priest, wh
hat Capuchin friar gives to my child, I pay him with a goblet of wine and a fine piece of
bout that," sa
ver my threshold again, I'll dr
he cure of chilblains and that history of the bugbear, with which that monk poisoned your son's mind. For the same price you paid for Friar Ange's lessons, I'll give him my own; I'll teach him Latin and Greek, and
ng parties having a drink together as a token of agreement. We will drink here. I'll never in my life
hands on the back of his chair, s
follow Him too closely. Because being universal He is to be found in all sorts of encounters, sublime by the conduct which He keeps, but obscene or ridiculous for the part man takes in it and which is the only part where they appear to us. And therefore one must not shout, in the
is goblet, he
warmth. It is a liquor worthy to be sung at Teos and at the Temple by the princes of ba
let under my ch
ves in harmonious swarms on the mouth of Jacobus T
should place themselves on the mouth of my Jacquot, as their sting is cruel. One day in biting into a peach a bee stung me on the tongue, and I had to suff
reproachfully: "Barbe, you're a holy and worthy woman, but many a time I have noticed that you have a pee
. I may not know all the sorts of bees, but I know how to manage a home and understand the good manners a
and poured some wine for the
ans, although degenerated at the time when rhetoric brought Eugenius to the Emperor's throne. It is not a rari
near it as the weakness of my age allowed me to hear distinctly and hereafter keep in my memory. I believe I have