Capitolo 66
more to express.
The complaint of the French artist against the Norman one is the
"mesquin" treatment to divide his/her tower in storeys of peer
height. Also in the twelfth century and in religious architecture,
artists already fought on the best solution of this
particularly American problem of the twentieth century, and when
tourists return to New York, they can look at the twenty-plan
towers that you/they decorate the city, to see if the Norman one or the
French Plan has won; but this, at least it will be sure in advance:--
the Norman one will be the practical scheme that affirms the facts, and
stops; while French will be graces him that the states the
beauties, and more or less it is all right well the facts to andarloro. Both the styles
it is great: both you/they can be fatiguing sometimes.
Here we have to take permission of Normandy; a small place but one that,
likes Attica or Tuscany, you/he/she has told a great quantity the world, and also
it keeps on saying things--not often in the ennuyeux of the famous kind--to
this day; for the style of Gustave Flaubert it is singly as that of
the Turn Saint-Romain and the Abbaye-aux-Hommes. Climbing the Seine
it is probable that one reads some pages of his/her letters, or of de of "Mrs. Bovary,"
to see how an old art transforms him in a new, without
changing his/her methods. Some critics have thought that to durations
Flaubert was mesquin as the Norman tower, but these are, as the
It says Frenchmen the defects of his/her qualities,; we can pass them on, and
you leave that our eyes remain on the simplicity of the Norman fleche that
it perforates the line of our horizon.
The last of Norman art is seen to Mantes, where a little there is
church of Gassicourt that marks the course the most distant of the style. In
arm as in architecture, Mantes blocked the run of Norman conquest;
William the Conqueror satisfied here his/her death in 1087. Geographically
Mantes is in the de of Ile Francia, less that forty miles from Paris.
Architecturally it is same Paris,; while, forty miles to the
toward south, it is Rentals, an independent or only feudally dependent