Where to begin. This past weekend was a much needed respite from the hustle of the city, but I didn’t realize how much I needed it until I was out in the countryside with the fields and animals and quiet. Friday morning started off early with a four hour drive on the bus with the group of us students anxious to get out of the city and see the marvels of Bourgogne. It was so nice just to sit on the bus for a while and look out the window at all of the ravens in the fields. The moment you see a raven walk, you know exactly why it can fly, and it was quite amusing to watch them strut with their necks jerking in every direction with each wobbly step.
The first stop was for lunch and a short walk around in Semur-en-Auxois.
The narrow stone streets and bucolic atmosphere was so serene and absolutely European. We were given two hours to do whatever we wanted, so we split into a few groups and became hopelessly confounded by the terrible tourist maps. I have become convinced that either no one in France knows how to draw a map, or it is a national pastime to watch tourists go in circles with their nose in a brochure trying to figure out which Rue St. Bernard they are on. When in doubt, you are on a Rue St. Bernard and in order to get where you are going, you need to take the third left onto Rue St. Bernard. Always. It’s either that or choose between the five different Rue St. Michels. Anyways, my group of four chose a small café for lunch where I had a surprisingly good goat cheese tarte and salad.
Back on the bus we next stopped at the Abbey de Fontenay where Mme. Suraqui was our guide once again as she knows a surprising amount about the places we visit and the architecture. It is turning fall here and all of the vines that covered the stone buildings were turning red and being both a private residence and a UNESCO world heritage site, the grounds were perfectly manicured.
The nuns and monks that used to live here were part of the Cistercian order and were know for being exceptionally stoic, silent, and sworn to a life of poverty, hard work, and simplicity. This abbey, built in 1098, was the first of its order. On a side note, the Cistercians are also called the Bernardines which only goes to prove that everything in France is named after a Bernard. I found the church rather exceptional in that it was completely striped down to the absolute fundamentals in a Romanesque-Gothic hybrid.
As with the majority of the abbeys of that order, the buildings formed a square around a courtyard with a covered porch walkway used for walking in circles around the courtyard reciting prayers and meditating. As we all took a symbolic walk around ourselves, it was interesting to think of all of the hundreds of thousands of times that various nuns had walked the exact same circle on the same stones and of how well they must have known each one.
The Three Musketeers (program directors) as we like to call them
Absolutely everything here is covered in thick moss and lichen
More bucolic and stunning countryside later, we arrived at our gîte (between a hostel and a bed and breakfast) La Combe d'été which was positioned high on a hill near a large and steep falaise (cliff) that had a breathtaking view of the Bourgogne countryside. We took a short walk up the road a bit and then across on a small trail to the very edge of la falaise which was one of my favorite bits of the trip.
Pictures just don't do justice.
2 comments:
Love, love, love reading this. It's a gift to us that you share this way. I am grateful.
I enjoy writing it so I'm glad that you enjoy reading it :) Tell the family I said hi!
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