| The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996. |
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| NUMBER: | 45350 |
| QUOTATION: | It seems that certain transcendental realities emit rays to which the masses are sensitive. That is how, for example, when an event takes place, when at the front an army is in danger, or defeated, or victorious, the rather obscure news which the cultivated man does not quite understand, excite in the masses an emotion which surprises him and in which, once the experts have informed him of the actual military situation, he recognizes the populaces perception of that aura surrounding great events and visible for hundreds of kilometers. |
| ATTRIBUTION: | Marcel Proust 187101922, French novelist. Nouvelle Revue Française (1918). Remembrance of Things Past, vol. II, Within a Budding Grove, p. 450, Pléiade (1954). |
| BIOGRAPHY: | Columbia Encyclopedia. |
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| | | The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press. |
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