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April 2019                            April 2019
 measured  by  the  lateness  of  one’s  arrival,  obliging  the
 local  lord  and  lady  of  the  manor  to  make  their   NEWS FROM WESTMINSTER
 appearance  just  minutes  before  ‘carriages’,  permit
 Gaskell  to  deploy  her  satirical  talents  to  the  full.  Similar   When  was  it  that  Edmund  Burke  told  the  voters  of
 precisely  measured  judgements  seem  characteristic  of   Bristol that a Member of Parliament “owes you, not
 attitudes in the small Midlands town where the story is set.   his industry only, but his judgment;  and he betrays,
 Thus the depth of mourning for his late wife of one of the   instead  of  serving  you,  if  he  sacrifices  it  to  your
 characters is criticised by local ladies on the grounds that   opinion”? You will have to read on to find out, but
 the  black  crape  band  worn  on  his  hat  is  less  than  the   the quote is as relevant today as it was back then,
 regulation  three  inches  wide.  Added  to  a  well-  not  least  in  relation  to  Brexit.  I  am  sometimes
 constructed  and  on  the  whole  believable  plot  (which   criticised  for  not  mentioning  Brexit  in  these  regular
 did,  it  is  true,  drag  somewhat  towards  the  end),  all  this   columns.  But  events  in  Westminster  are  extremely
 made for an enjoyable read and was accordingly given   fast moving that anything I write is likely to be out of
 a universal ‘thumbs up’ by the Group.   date before it is published. At the time of writing, we
       have  not  yet  had  the  vote  on  the  Prime  Minister’s

       proposed deal, and we are waiting to hear if there have been any changes to
    Villette  - Charlotte Bronte   the proposed Backstop.
 In  February  we  were  back  in  stormier  waters  with     Over  the  last  two  years
 Charlotte  Brontë’s  last  novel,  Villette  (1853).  George      and   more   since   the
 Orwell controversially said good prose should be like a   referendum,  a  very  large
 pane  of  clear  glass:  transparent  and  invisible.  If   number  of  residents  have
 Elizabeth  Gaskell  passes  Orwell’s  test,  on  the  same   contacted  me  about  their
 analogy reading Brontë is more like peering through a   views   on   Brexit.   As
 stained-glass  window  designed  by  one  of  the  pre-  expected,  these  are  wide-
 Raphaelites.  Like  the  members  of  that  brotherhood,   ranging  and  cover  the
 Brontë  is  devoted  to  the  arcane,  the  archaic,  the   whole  spectrum  of  views.
 medieval.  Why  describe  something  as  repugnant,   Some  people  want  us  to
 when the word ‘oppugnant’ can be taken down from    ignore  the  result  of  the
 the  shelf  where  it  has  lain  unnoticed  for  centuries,   referendum, and stay in the
 dusted  off  and  then  returned  to  obscurity?    ‘My   European   Union.   Some
 impressions   of   it’   becomes   ‘my   impressions   people  think  we  should  have  left  straight  after  the  vote,  and  see  no  point  in
 thereanent’, ‘at a stately pace’ ‘incedingly’; an ink-stained, dusty jacket is said to   trying to do a deal with the EU. I have received hundreds of emails from people
 be ‘be-inked’ and ‘adust’; ‘old age’ or ‘antiquity’  is ‘eld’. She is particularly fond   telling me how to vote: vote for a deal, against a deal, to stay in the EU, to leave
 of  strange  outdated  constructions  ending  in  ‘-less’:  ‘tameless’,  ‘resistless’,   without  a  deal,  to  extend  article  50,  to  have  another  referendum.  There  are
 ‘quenchless’,  even  ‘wretchless’  (=  ‘reckless’).    Conversely,  Brontë  disinters  the   those who want a closer union with Europe, and for us to start using the Euro,
 dead root-word ‘ruth’ (= ‘kindness’, ‘mercy’), of which ‘ruthless’ is the only living   others feel that the European Union is a failed project, and the sooner we leave
 survivor.  Brontë’s  sentence  construction  too  is  often  deliberately  ornate  and   the better.
 opaque, so slowing the pace of reading that some of us, this reviewer included,
 struggled to finish the book on time.    And this takes me back to Edmund Burke. The quote may be nearly 250 years old
       (the answer is 1774), but I think it is still vitally important in the social media age.
 Even  so,  it  would  be  churlish  to  deny  the  book’s  many  positive  qualities,  which   Nearly all the letters and emails from constituents exhort me to “represent their
 have led some critics to prefer it to Jane Eyre. Semi-autobiographical in nature, it   views”.  But as so many are conflicting, I clearly cannot vote exactly as everyone
 presents  us  with  a  gripping  psychological  study  of  the  central  character,  Lucy   says that they would like!  I have to vote based on my opinion of the question in
 Snowe,  a  lonely  young  woman  in  search  of  love  and  happiness.  The  other   front of me.
 characters  are  convincingly  drawn.  The  enigmatic  professor  Paul  Emanuel,  an

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