Catolicismo Nº 104 - August 1959 (www.catolicismo.com.br)
AMBIENCES, COSTUMS, CIVILIZATIONS
The Grandeur of the King Dignifies the Cook
Consider the aerial view of
This edifice, this
fantastic set of edifices, is at one and the same time the symbol and treasure
chest of an institution: the British royalty. In this symbol, like so many
others of traditional
Paternal mark, we say. This
castle does not aim to show mass, but talent. It was made not to intimidate,
but to enchant.
The subject who
contemplates it does not tremble at its sight; he does not feel like fleeing,
but like entering.
* * *
The relations between the great ones
and the small ones are influenced by this ambience. The nobility of the lord is
transmitted to his servant. Thus the immense kitchen of Windsor, which is very
authentically a kitchen, is indisputably a high, noble, and worthy kitchen of a
castle, one that communicates something of the royal dignity itself to the
humble, servile activity of the cook and gives it a splendor that is, as it
were, regal.
This is
because in Christian civilization the grandeur of the lord does not humiliate
the servant — but elevates him.