I think I must have been living in parallel universes for some time.  The other day I asked my brother when his daughter-in-law's baby is due, only to be told she isn't pregnant.  Yet I'm sure he told me she is!  And that's but the one example of what I mean.
And was I in that other universe or did I really read  - about 10 days ago - that a judge (or whoever) refused to order a village church to silence its clock during the night?  I hope I did actually read it because I get so hot under the collar when I learn of people buying their dream house in a small village, only to complain that the church clock strikes every hour or that they are woken by the crowing of a cock in a nearby garden.  It always seems to me rather like somebody buying a house next door to a school - and then complaining that the children make a noise at play time!  Why is it, I wonder, that the local official who decides what noise is acceptable so often decides in favour of the newcomer, despite the fact that the church clock has been striking the hour every day for hundreds of years and nobody else is or ever has been bothered by it?
When we are in France, I delight in hearing the various clocks chiming the hours - and some of them even quarters.  The church in the village has a clock which sounds the hours and we can just about hear it when we are in the courtyard.  In the nearest town there are two clocks, one in the church tower and one in the medieval gate.  Both strike the hours, but they are not quite in synch, the medieval gate only starting when the church has finished chiming.  It always amuses me to hear that.  (I know - I'm easily amused.)
I've told the story before about one of the houses we were shown over when we were hunting for our elusive French hideaway, but what the heck . . .
Just a few minutes later we were
 in the square of  the next village along the road, in the middle of a 
crowd of people  dressed up as if for a wedding, which indeed proved to 
be the case. It  seemed easier to accept the carnation buttonhole than 
to explain we were  not there for the wedding but only to view a house. 
Why is it that one  Frenchman or Frenchwoman alone can be quiet and 
charming, but when two  or three dozen are gathered together they sound 
like a flock of  starlings at dusk? By the time we had fought our way 
through to the door  of the house, the volume of their conversations had
 increased to match  that of Wembley Stadium on Cup Final day. Things 
got even more out of  hand when a procession of cars swept round the 
corner, each driver  trying to sound his horn louder and longer than the
 one before him. I  was approached by a trio of femmes formidables,
 all billowy and blowsy  like ships of the line under full canvas. From 
the glint in their eyes I  got the distinct impression that they were 
intent on revenge for the  Battle of Trafalgar. Disengaging myself with 
some difficulty, I followed  Monsieur Moran (the estate agent) and Mrs S into the house as 
the bride descended from her  limousine. 
Did
 I  call it a house? It was more like a rabbit warren, a delightful  
hotchpotch of rooms running off at all sorts of crazy levels. There was 
 at least one room halfway up each flight of stairs. Stairs led down 
into  a cellar which led on to a second with exits to both the garden 
and the  kitchen. Somehow, the kitchen, which seemed to be on the same 
level as  the rest of the ground floor, was also on the same level as 
the second  cellar, despite the fact that we had descended stairs to 
reach that.
One  thing it didn't have was a bathroom although in 
typical French fashion  there was a shower installed on the landing. 
That problem could be  solved quite easily, we realised, by converting 
the third bedroom or by  utilising one of the rooms leading off the 
stairs. On the other hand, if  a latter-day Bridget Bardot or Sophia Loren came to stay 
with us . . .
Smiling  inwardly, I went with the others to inspect 
the garden. This was, or  rather could have been, a delight. Walled on 
all three sides, it had two  mature pear trees and would be a 
magnificent sun trap. The well,  fortunately, was in a shed which could 
be padlocked for safety. Mrs S  has a passion for gardening, and it was 
difficult to restrain her from  getting down on her knees to start 
sorting out the borders.
Going  back indoors we admired the new 
double-glazed windows in the living  room. The house stood in a very 
pleasant position at one corner of the  village square, the front 
windows giving onto the square, dominated by  the large church just to 
one side, and looking across to the bar on the  opposite corner. From 
the side windows we looked across the lane straight into a  farmyard complete with ducks
 wandering about. We had reluctantly decided  that both house and garden
 were too large for us, despite the knockdown  price, when a major 
disadvantage confirmed our decision by revealing  itself. The wedding 
service in the church had just finished, and as the  bride and groom 
arrived at the church door the bells started. Two  minutes of that and I
 knew just how Quasimodo must have felt in the  tower of Notre Dame. I 
shuddered to think of the peace and quiet of lazy  Sunday mornings being
 so rudely shattered, especially those mornings  after good nights at 
the bar.
Monsieur Moran seemed very  
philosophical when we told him we would think about it over the weekend 
 and let him know. He had obviously heard that before, although others  
had doubtless expressed it more elegantly than my French would allow.
 
2 comments:
Nice post. I'm totally with you on the subject of bells. Our village church is a mere stroll away and we love the sound of the bells, even the odd crazy campanologist!
Beautiful post BP with a real story telling feel about it. I wanted to peek into all those rooms leading off the stairs.
I love church bells, my Grandfather was a bell ringer and sometimes used to take my up into the belfry (reached by some very rickety stairs leading up the outside of the church) we lived a little distance from the church but close enough to hear the bells each time they rang but I'm not sure I'd want them ringing right outside my house.
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