Representation

Combray at a distance

Combray at a distance, from a twenty-mile radius, as we used to see it from the railway when we arrived there in the week before Easter, was no more than a church epitomising the town, representing it, speaking of it and for it to the horizon, and as one drew near, gathering close about its long, dark cloak, sheltering from the wind, on the open plain, as a shepherdess gathers her sheep, the woolly grey backs of its huddled houses, which the remains of its mediaeval ramparts enclosed, here and there, in an outline as scrupulously circular as that of a little town in a primitive painting.

Narrative Context: 
Combray landscape
Image: 
The road into Illiers-Combray || http://perso.wanadoo.fr/illiers-combray.asepic/pages/proustien/proust.html
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Paintings

She attempted by a subterfuge, if not to eliminate altogether this commercial banality, at least to minimise it, to supplant it to a certain extent with what was still art, to introduce, as it were, several "thicknesses" of art: instead of photographs of Chartres Cathedral, of the Fountains of Saint-Cloud, or of Vesuvius, she would inquire of Swann whether some great painter had not depicted them, and preferred to give me photographs of "Chartres Cathedral" after Corot, of the "Fountains of Saint-Cloud" after Hubert Robert, and of "Vesuvius" after Turner, which were a stage higher in the scale of art.

Narrative Context: 
Memory of childhood bedtime ritual; grandmother's insistence on photography books depicting great paintings.
Image: 
Chartres Cathedral (1830/72), by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot || Source - http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/corot/
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