The Year of Reading Proust discussion

This topic is about
The Guermantes Way
The Guermantes Way, vol. 3
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Through Sunday, 2 June: The Guermantes Way
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So is my spaish edition.It´s divided in two and has chapters with subtitles of what is to come.

I think Charlus has it in his mind to pick the Narrator up,that is why he is made to sound innocent.

I'm still here, and keeping up with you. I'm v. preoccupied with re-reading The English Common ..."
I´d love to be your pupil and learn about Victorian England and Dickens.I love that era and i so enjoy its lit. the Brontës,Hardy.

"Everything we think of as great has come from the neurotics. It is they and they alone who found religions and great works of art. The world will never r..."
"...what they have suffered in order to bestow their gifts on it."
Thinking about "neurotics" and Eugene's comment on doctors...led me back to Kay Redfield Jamison's masterful book, "Touched With Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament"
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36...
Dr. Jamison, bi-polar herself, is a wise voice.
After remembering two creative souls, who I loved and attempted to stay off the roller-coaster, Kalliope's flowers were soothing.

I´d love to be your pupil and learn about Victorian England and Dickens.I love that era and i so enjoy its lit. the Brontës,Hardy.
Dickens usually strikes me as a 2nd-rate concoction of Gothic & Grimms Fairy Tale, leavened with a patina of social commentary. Perhaps its because my Grandfather, starting out as a Liverpool street-urchen, ended up marrying the granddaughter of an Austrian-Jewish Countess, so Disney's "Lady & the Tramp" is more my speed!

"'I heard the whole of the 'Marquise's' conversation with the keeper,' she told me. 'Could anything have been more typical of the Guermantes, or the Verdurins and their little clan? "Ah! in what courtly terms those things were put!"' And she added, with deliberate application, this from her own special Marquise, Mme de Sévigné: 'As I listened to them I thought that they were preparing for me the delights of a farewell.'"
"Grand-mère, Mme Amèdée watching Marcel as they listen to
the water-closet attendant on the Champs-Elysées" by David Richardson
Website: "Resemblance: The Portraits & etc"
Warning...Spoilers lurk. Here: http://resemblancetheportraits.blogsp...
Source: resemblancetheportraits.blogspot.com Warning...Spoilers lurk!

I may be scrambling the sections, so forgive me if that is the case...but is this where the Duc de Guermantes calls upon the family, makes callous remarks about the care his physician could have provided, insisting on the presence of the Narrator's mother when she is grieving the imminent loss of her mother?
I have been enthralled with the prism Proust has so deftly painted of each character. One minute I am laughing at their absurdity...and then my mouth open in laughter...ice water of some cruelty is thrown...and then they are forgiven...and capable of kindness or generosity...which we are then told, at least in the case of the aristocracy, may look like a kindness or generosity but in fact is simply a masquerading habit with roots in their ancestry that doesn't translate to any depth of connection.
As Marcus stated, it is all painted with a humble eye...a reportage...that allows room for us to experience all facets.
I am beginning to sense we are free to experience all facets of our own very human self.
Books mentioned in this topic
Paintings in Proust: A Visual Companion to 'In Search of Lost Time' (other topics)Manon Lescaut (other topics)
The English Common Reader: A Social History of the Mass Reading Public (other topics)
Consuming Passions: Leisure and Pleasure in Victorian Britain (other topics)
Le Côté de Guermantes II (other topics)
These would be in Odette's taste, for they are Chrysanthemums.
I love the way you post pictures .It lightens reading like the books for children I used to read did.
And here some Pivoines:
Some roses wi..."