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240 pages, Kindle Edition
Published September 1, 2011
that feeling you never have in a Romanesque church, only in a Renaissance building, comes over me: that you yourself are the gauge by which the space is measured. That lines could be (or are being) drawn from your person to every imaginable point within that space. Accordingly you become, besides an enthralled spectator, a mechanically moving object – a split sensation that once heralded the coming of a new era more clearly than any words were able to express. (p. 166-167)
On the one hand, proud of their history, with its diversity, internal rivalries, and age-old traditions, they wish to preserve it all, to rebel against the mandatory British history that is so much less real to them, and is at best an equally voracious and tribalistic conflict of interests, which only has to be mastered because Europe still calls the shots. On the other hand, insomuch as it is still the daily reality, it is precisely this aspect of their history that must be done away with: for how can you get a modern state off the ground when it is liable to founder immediately on antiquated enmities and traumas? (p. 202)