The second period of St. Therese's life: from 1877 till the grace of Christmas 1886 - at Les Buissonnets
Homeschooling, 1877-1881
Louis Martin and his five daughters moved into a villa in Lisieux in 1877; they named it "Les Buissonnets" ("the little bushes"). They enjoyed the company of Zelie's brother, Isidore Guerin, who was a pharmacist in Lisieux, and his wife, Celine. Therese's sisters taught her at home for a few years. About the end of 1879 or the beginning of 1880 little Therese made her first confession at St. Pierre's Cathedral.
A day student at the Benedictine Abbey of Notre Dame du Pre
In October 1881 she became a day student at the Benedictine Abbey of Notre Dame Pre at Lisieux. Through an Australian newspaper I discovered the existence of a series of articles about St. Therese's schooldays written by one of the Benedictine nuns who taught her for the magazine The Far East. The Columban Missionaries, who publish The Far East even today, unearthed these treasures from their archives and graciously encouraged me to display them. The Little Flower at School, Part I gives the history of the Benedictine Abbey and describes Therese as she was when she arrived at the school in October 1881, aged eight and a half.
A year later, on October 2, 1882, Therese's sister Pauline became a postulant at the Carmel of Lisieux.
Cured through the prayers of the Blessed Virgin
The following spring Therese became very ill. On May 13, 1883, Therese was cured by the smile of the Blessed Virgin, as she recounts in her memoir, "Story of a Soul." Part 2 of "The Little Flower at School" sketches Therese's school life from her entry in 1881 until the fall of 1883, when she was ten and a half years old.
Therese's First Communion
At eleven, on May 8, 1884, Therese made her First Communion at the Benedictine Abbey. Read Part 3 of "The Little Flower at School:" "The Little Flower's First Communion, by one of her teachers," an article written in 1934 for the 50th anniversary of Therese's First Communion. It describes the day in minutest detail and gives information never published before. See reflections on the anniversary of Therese's First Communion.
Therese's confirmation
She was confirmed by Bishop Hugonin at the Benedictine Abbey on June 14, 1884; her sponsor was her sister Leonie. See a sketch of Therese being confirmed and read her account of her confirmation at the Web site of the Archives of the Carmel of Lisieux.
About February 1886 Therese left the Abbey school and took private lessons with Mme. Papinau. On October 15, 1886, Therese's oldest sister, Marie, entered the Lisieux Carmel. On December 25, 1886, on her return home from midnight Mass at St. Pierre's Cathedral, Therese experienced what she called her "complete conversion," being freed in a moment from the excessive sensitivity of her childhood.
Photos Les Buissonnets and statue copyright Al Basil; photo of Lisieux Carmel copyright Paul Ryan, all rights reserved. Used with permission.
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Links to photos and information about St.Therese from 1877-1886
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Photos of the town of Lisieux as it appeared five years before the Martin family moved there
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116 photos by Francois Bidet of Lisieux during Therese's time, presented by the Bibliotheque Electronique de Lisieux
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Les Buissonnets
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Photos from the blog l'instantane of the images which influenced Therese
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Photos showing the pharmacy of Therese's Uncle Isidore Guerin, his house on Rue Paul-Banaston, Louis Martin's last home on Rue Labbey, where he lived from his release from the Bon Sauveur asylum in 1892 until his death in 1894, and other scenes of Lisieux