He
could see the pianist sitting down to play the Moonlight Sonata, and the
grimaces of Mme. Verdurin, in terrified anticipation of the wrecking of her
nerves by Beethoven’s music. “Idiot, liar!” he shouted, “and a creature like
that imagines that she’s fond of Art!” She would say to Odette, after deftly
insinuating a few words of praise for Forcheville, as she had so often done for
himself: “You can make room for M. de Forcheville there, can’t you, Odette?”...
‘“In the dark!’ Codfish! Pander!” ... ‘Pander’ was the name he applied also to
the music which would invite them to sit in silence, to dream together, to gaze
in each other’s eyes, to feel for each other’s hands. He felt that there was
much to be said, after all, for a sternly censorous attitude towards the arts,
such as Plato adopted, and Bossuet, and the old school of education in France.
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