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Wednesday, 3 October 2018

The Brontë Brussels Calendar: August 1842


1 August, Monday – Weather: 13 to 19 C, clouded morning, some sunshine in the afternoon
The actress Rachel gave her fourth performance in Brussels. Franz Liszt went to the St Gudule, to judge an organist of that cathedral. The papers wrote he approved.

2 August, Tuesday – W: 11 to 23 C, cumulus clouds
August was a warm month. The maximum temperature for each day of the rest of the month would be at least today’s. During most of it there was almost no wind.

3 August, Wednesday – W: 14 to 26 C, sunny morning, somewhat clouded afternoon
The King and Queen arrive back in Brussels, after several weeks in France following the death of the Duc d’Orléans ( July), but before he would find his final resting place, in Dreux on Thursday.

4 August, Thursday – W: 16 to 29 C, some clouds, especially in the afternoon
Charlotte, on this half-free day makes a drawing of a river scene with trees. She had surely gone out for a good walk, with her sister, one would think. ( 6 August) Another drawing is dated as probably from this month.

Courtesy of the Brontë Society
If it is a real view it must have been drawn at or close to the Zenne river, southeast of the city. That much is clear. We hope to be able to identify the place later, if it indeed is.



5 August, Friday – W: 16 to 28 C, some cumulus clouds
Both Charlotte and Emily finish writing a devoir named L’Amour filial. Emily also finished Lettre d’un frère a un frère.
Gustave Charlier, in his article about cultural life in Brussels in Villette, argued that Charlotte saw today’s performance of Rachel, in Ariane. This may not be true. Charlotte did see her in London almost a decade later, and may have used that for her ‘Vashti’ chapter in Villette ; a letter of hers suggests that she had never seen her before this. It can’t be excluded though that she did see her in Brussels.
In 1842 Rachel was already a somewhat controversial woman, but in the following years she became ‘scandalous.’ Charlotte of course would dissociate herself from such behavior. It could be a reason why in her letter she did not admit having seen Rachel in Brussels. But in using Rachel for Villette Charlotte must at least have remembered the excitement of the city in these days.
This play was billed as Rachel’s last performance in Brussels, so there would have been a run for tickets. Next day it was announced she would give three more performances in Brussels.

6 August, Saturday – 17 to 26 C, heavy rain and a thunderstorm after 5 am, otherwise a bright day
The Journal de Bruxelles reported that a house at the corner of the Rue des Chartreux was hit by lightning.
Charlotte finished a drawing of a tree and a cottage. One would presume this drawing was begun on Thursday. It is rather unlikely she would have gone out for another good walk. Saturday was a school day.

7 August, Sunday – W: 17 to 25 C, some clouds in the afternoon

8 August, Monday – W: 16 to 24 C, quite clouded

9 August, Tuesday – W: 14 to 28 C, some clouds in the afternoon
L’Indépendant wrote that Adolphe Sax (“domicilié a Ixelles, chaussée d’Etterbeek, no 41”) had obtained a patent for his invention of the saxophone. In the description it was said to be a ‘different system of clarinet, with a different key system’.

10 August, Wednesday – W: 19 to 32 C, cloudless
This day saw the beginning of a fierce debate in parliament and in the newspapers on the proposed new law on primary education. It was especially about the role of the clergy. For the Catholics it was a necessity that religion and morals were a necessary part of the teaching at schools. The liberals disagreed.
L’Indépendant wrote about this year’s harvest. In general it wasn’t good, due to the weather, and an increase in prices meant that ‘the misery is great among the working class.’

11 August, Thursday – W: 17 to 24 C, fairly clouded
Both sisters finished a devoir on this Thursday. Charlotte’s was named La chenille, Emily’s Le papillon.

12 August, Friday – W: 12 to 25 C, almost cloudless
There was a party at the Pensionnat, to celebrate the end of the school year.
On the day that Rachel gave her 7th performance at the Royal Theatre L’Indépendant reported that she would do six more. And that from this day she would get 3000 francs for each performance. That is about a third of the ticket sales revenue.
The paper also had a list of recent marriages in Ixelles, which included the wedding of the widower of M.C.J. Gérin, possibly an ancestor or at least related to Winifred Gérin.

13 August, Saturday – W: 13 to 27 C, some clouds
The first day of the sisters’ holiday.

14 August, Sunday – W: 13 to 29 C, no clouds
The scale of industrial unrest in Britain had vastly expanded, the papers reported, from Lancashire to Yorkshire, Cheshire and Glasgow. Manchester, on the 10th, had witnessed ‘continuing troubles with more violence.’ This unrest came close to home on this day, as Juliet Barker wrote in The Brontës. “There were riots, with violent consequences, in Halifax, Huddersfield, Bradford, Todmorden, Bingley, Skipton and Keighley and, on 14 August, it was estimated that 10,000 Chartists were gathered on Lees Moor, within sight and sound of Haworth.”

15 August, Monday – W: 14 to 29 C, another cloudless day
Juliet Barker, in a note in her book (p. 910), wrote that M. Heger gave a talk at the Athenée Royale on this day. However, there’s no proof he did give a ‘discours’ and at any rate, the event was held at the Temple des Augustins (as the Journal de Bruxelles wrote in a review on the 17th). The main part of this end of the school year celebration appears to have been the ‘distribution of prizes.’ Heger did speak at the occasion in 1843.
There was again a concert in the Park. Rachel gave her eight performance.
‘Thanks to heaven,’ l’Indépendant wrote on this day, ‘communism and Chartism are still unknown in Belgium.’ They were a great danger, it said. Only three years later Karl Marx himself came to live in Brussels for two years, during which time he wrote the Communist Manifest.

16 August, Tuesday – W: 14 to 31 C, very sunny again, but with cirrus clouds
Because it was Mary Assumption Day there were no newspapers.

17 August, Wednesday – W: 18 to 29 C, clouded morning, quite bright afternoon and evening

18 August, Thursday – W: 15 to 32 C, almost cloudless

19 August, Friday – W: 19 to 30 C, quite clouded, rain at the end of the day

20 August, Saturday – W: 18 to 23 C, pretty clouded
Emily began writing her poem ‘How do I love  on summer nights …’. She finished it almost half a year later, on 6 February 1843.

21 August, Sunday – W: 17 to 28 C, cumulus clouds
This day saw the official opening of the Salon, the big exhibition held every three year. Charlotte certainly visited it. In Villette she devotes a chapter to it. On a number of days there was free access for the people. Because of the large amount of works, paintings mostly, it would have needed two visits at least to take it all in. The Salon was held at the Palais du Musée, quite close to the Pensionnat.
Every day brought more news about the unrest in Yorkshire. At Halifax, L’Indépendant reported, ‘the movement has taken the character of an insurrection’ and 6 to 12 people had been shot dead. In Bradford demonstrators were wounded

22 August, Monday – W: 15 to 30 C, few clouds

23 August, Tuesday – W: 16 to 29 C, somewhat clouded

24 August, Wednesday – W: 15 to 29 C, some clouds, a thunderstorm beginning at 3.30 pm
Charlotte finished her Le but de la vie devoir.

25 August, Thursday – 18 to 28 C, pretty clouded, rain between 6 and 7 am
The newspapers reported that the ‘commision directrice’ of the Salon had already started buying paintings for the lottery. One of them was Fanny Geefs’ ‘La vie d’une femme,’ described by Charlotte in Villette.
‘At the occasion of the feast of Her Majesty,’ l’Indépendant wrote on the 27th, ‘all public buildings, ministries and foreign ambassadors’ houses were illuminated. The Société royale de la Grande Harmonie also had illuminated its magnificent façade at the Rue de la Madeleine and adorned it with the national flag. A crowd of pedestrians, invited by the fine weather, were walking on the main streets, until quite late in the evening. The curious especially went to the St. Pierre and Trois-Têtes streets, where the inhabitants celebrated the feast of St. Roch, patron of the quarter, by joyous demonstrations. These streets were elegantly decorated.’ The St Roch quarter was neighbouring the Isabella quarter.

26 August, Friday – 16 to 25 C, quite sunny
Owners of horse coaches came together at Le Cygne at the Grand Place to ‘take measures against the conduct of their drivers about which the public has so often been complaining.’ They unanimously agreed on a new set of regulations.
L’Indépendant wrote about a flowering Agave Americana in the Botanical Garden. This is a rare event, as it can take 70 years for such a plant to do that. For most of the people in Brussels it would have been a once in a life opportunity to witness this phenomenon.

27 August, Saturday – 16 to 26 C, quite clouded, especially after the beginning of a thunderstorm around 3.30 pm, rain stops around 6.30, heavy rain between 10 pm and 1 am
It was welcome rain. The newspapers had regularly been reporting this month about the harvest results, in this year of the great drought. This dry and warm month hadn’t helped. Even the cows were affected, butter had become quite expensive. A weather expert said this year only compared to 1793, with regard to the duration of the warmth and dryness. In Paris the water level of the Seine had even gone below the previous record low level of 1719.
‘One of the most hideous aspects of the latest troubles in the manufacturing districts in England,’ the Journal de Bruxelles wrote on this day, ‘is the participation of women in the movement. Thousands of mothers of families have no fear to travel from Lancashire to Yorkshire, to excite the men to work no longer [i.e. to go on strike]. Near Halifax thousands of women were singing Chartist hymns in chore, while their husbands closed the factories.’

28 August, Sunday – W: 17 to 25 C, fairly clouded
The Société Philharmonique gave a “grand concert” in the Park. The entrance fee was 50 centimes.

29 August, Monday – W: 17 to 24 C, quite clouded, a bit of rain in the afternoon, a thunderstorm around 6 pm with a good amount of rain
Rachel gives the last of her Brussels performance at the Royal Theatre.

30 August, Tuesday – W: 14 to 24 C, somewhat clouded, a thunderstorm around midday
‘Magnificent weather has favoured a historical spectacle,’ l’Indépendant wrote two days later. ‘A great part of the population was on feet to witness it.’



 31 August, Wednesday – W: 15 to 23 C, somewhat clouded, a spell of heavy rain between 3.30 and 4 am
The news from France was that work had finally begun there on building the last part of the railway line that would connect Brussels and Paris.

During this long school holiday, which would last another month, Emily began giving piano lessons to the Wheelwright sisters.

Eric Ruijssenaars

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