Step 6 of 7

Velvet

...the sun, threatened by a cloud, but still beating down with all its strength on the square and in the sacristy gave a geranium-flesh tint to the carpets that had been laid out for the solemnities...and added to their woolly weave a rosy velvet, an epidermis of light, the sort of tenderness, the sort of grave sweetness amid pomp and joy that characterize certain pages of Lohengrin (from Combray)Proust, Marcel. In Search of Lost time, Volume 1 The way by Swann’s, Part I: Combray. Translated by Lydia Davis. London, penguin Books Ltd, 2003, 178.

Proust mentions velvet a lot in this novel. The fabric is soft, smooth, heavy, and it displays a dramatic light-and-dark effect when wrinkled. Its origins are uncertain, but it has been suggested that it was first produced in China and was then brought to Europe via the Silk Road in the thirteenth century. Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood. TRC Leiden, “A Brief History of Velvet”, TRC Leiden Velvet was mainly produced in Europe in the fourteenth century in Lucca, Italy. It was still a precious fabric, and reserved for the elite. This changed in the eighteenth century when velvet started to be produced all over Europe, from Bologna, to London and St.Petersburg. Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood. TRC Leiden, “A Brief History of Velvet”, TRC Leiden

In Proust’s novel, velvet seems to be associated with the “strange and pious sadness” of Combray. Velvet is both smooth as well as dark and heavy, which is why, I think, it symbolizes the sereneness of the melancholic atmosphere of this town so well. On one hand, velvet symbolizes the simplicity and comfort of life at Combray: aunt Léonie’s cozy sitting room has “stamped velvet armchairs”. On the other hand, velvet also appears in scenes that have a sense of nostalgia: the protagonist imagines the church’s “strange old face” as “a brown velvet cushion”.Proust, Marcel. In Search of Lost time, Volume 1 The way by Swann’s, Part I: Combray. Translated by Lydia Davis. London, penguin Books Ltd, 2003, 66-7. Since velvet is so often mentioned in relation to Combray, it is safe to assume that Proust has the same tender yet somber feelings about Combray as he has about velvet as a fabric.