As architecture, itâs pretty measly, isnât it? Itâs by Davioud, I fancy.â âBut how learned my little Albertine is becoming! Of course it was Davioud who built it, but I couldnât have told you offhand.â âWhile you are asleep, I read your books, you old lazybones.â âListen, child, you are changing so fast and becoming so intelligentâ (this was true, but even had it not been true I was not sorry that she should have the satisfaction, failing any other, of saying to herself that at least the time which she spent in my house was not being entirely wasted) âthat I donât mind telling you things that would generally be regarded as false and which are all on the way to a truth that I am seeking. You know what is meant by impressionism?â âOf course!â âVery well then, this is what I mean: you remember the church at Marcouville lâOrgueilleuse which Elstir disliked because it was new. Isnât it rather a denial of his own impressionism when he subtracts such buildings from the general impression in which they are contained to bring them out of the light in which they are dissolved and scrutinise like an archaeologist their intrinsic merit?
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