Episode 89: The Literary Life of Adrienne Freas

Published: April 13, 2021, 5 a.m.

On The Literary Life podcast this week, hosts Cindy Rollins and Angelina Stanford interview their friend and veteran homeschool mother of 4, Adrienne Freas. Adrienne is now the Classical Education Advisor for the K-12 Curriculum and Professional Development Project at University of Dallas Classical Education Master\u2019s Degree program at the University of Dallas, and she is active in consulting and advocating for Charlotte Mason\u2019s educational philosophy. Adrienne was a featured speaker in the 2019 Back to School Conference, available for replay at morningtimeformoms.com.

Adrienne describes her young life and how the fine arts were the highlight of her childhood and her early struggles to learn to read. She shares how high school literature teachers and reading the classics whet her appetite for even more great literature. She talks about the difference it makes to have a teacher who is enthusiastic and believes the students can step up to the challenge. Cindy, Angelina and Adrienne all share their love for Charlotte Mason and her philosophy of giving children a wide and generous curriculum.

Commonplace Quotes:

Whenever we are called to teach, our proclamation of goodness should be so wrapped in beauty as to console. This should apply to our daily actions as well, and it is an art.

Timothy Patitsas

Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.

Martin Luther

Q (Quiller-Couch) was all by himself my college education. I went down to the public library one day when I was 17 looking for books on the art of writing, and found five books of lectures which Q had delivered to his students of writing at Cambridge.
\u201cJust what I need!\u201d I congratulated myself. I hurried home with the first volume and started reading and got to page 3 and hit a snag:
Q was lecturing to young men educated at Eton and Harrow. He therefore assumed that his students\u2014including me\u2014had read\xa0Paradise Lost\xa0as a matter of course and would understand his analysis of the \u201cInvocation to Light\u201d in book 9. So I said, \u201cWait here,\u201d and went down to the library and got\xa0Paradise Lost\xa0and took it home and started reading it and got to page 3 when I hit a snag:
Milton assumed I\u2019d read the Christian version of Isaiah and the New Testament and had learned all about Lucifer and the War in Heaven, and since I\u2019d been reared in Judaism I hadn\u2019t. So I said, \u201cWait here,\u201d and borrowed a Christian Bible and read about Lucifer and so forth, and then went back to Milton and read\xa0Paradise Lost, and then finally got back to Q, page 3. On page 4 or 5, I discovered that the point of the sentence at the top of the page was in Latin and the long quotation at the bottom of the page was in Greek. So I advertised in the\xa0Saturday Review\xa0for somebody to teach me Latin and Greek, and went back to Q meanwhile, and discovered he assumed I not only knew all the plays of Shakespeare, and Boswell\u2019s\xa0Johnson, but also the Second Book of Esdras, which is not in the Old Testament and is not in the New Testament, it\u2019s in the Apocrypha, which is a set of books nobody had ever thought to tell me existed.
So what with one thing and another and an average of three \u201cWait here\u2019s\u201d a week, it took me eleven years to get through Q\u2019s five books of lectures.

Helene Hanff
After Reading \u201cAntony and Cleopatra\u201d

by Robert Louis Stevenson

As when the hunt by holt and field
Drives on with horn and strife,
Hunger of hopeless things pursues
Our spirits throughout life.

The sea\u2019s roar fills us aching full
Of objectless desire \u2013
The sea\u2019s roar, and the white moon-shine,
And the reddening of the fire.

Who talks to me of reason now?
It would be more delight
To have died in Cleopatra\u2019s arms
Than be alive to-night.

Book List:

The Ethics of Beauty by Timothy Patitsas

The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street by Helene Hanff

Macbeth by William Shakespeare

Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bront\xeb

The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams

The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

Emily Dickinson

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis

Consider This: Charlotte Mason and the Classical Tradition by Karen Glass

A History of the English-Speaking People by Winston Churchill

Paradise Lost by John Milton

The Divine Comedy by Dante Algieri

The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie

Perceval by Chretien de Troyes

Til We Have Faces by C. S. Lewis

Becoming Mrs. Lewis by Patti Callahan

Lenten Lands by Douglas Gresham

The Betrothed: I Promesi Sposi by Alessandro Manzoni

The Consolation of Philosophy by Ancius Beothius

Range by David Epstien

Gene Stratton Porter

Elizabeth Goudge

Waverly by Sir Walter Scott

Reorienting Rhetoric by John D. O\u2019Banion

Unbinding Prometheus by Donald Cowan

Heidi by Johanna Spyri

The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald

Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield Fischer

The Story of King Arthur and His Knights by Howard Pyle

Augustus Caesar\u2019s World by Genevieve Foster

Beowulf translated by Burton Raffel

The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser

The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens

The Once and Future King by T. H. White

Men of Iron by Howard Pyle

Links Mentioned:

AmblesideOnline

The Well Read Poem

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