Monday, December 14, 2009

Supermodels With Normal Clothes

The Two Standards, Rebatet Lucien (1951)


The Two Standards ", a term that would be found on the side of Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order, these are two schools of" thought "that oppose Regis and Michel, longtime friends.
Regis has faith, a chemical that we inherit from their parents or that is acquired by a concession to the afterlife. "Simply accept to believe to believe "says Regis wishing devoted his life to the priesthood. The indulgence toward unfounded opens the door to religion that invades our being in all that man has brewed since ancient times ...
Michel is an artist, he believes only what he owns and observes. He is pragmatic and alongside the abstract for his art, he created. His discussions with Regis go very far, it seems sometimes touch the bottom of the metaphysical problem that resides within us, to fall off again in contradiction and nonsense as silly.
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But Anne-Marie, devoted herself as a religious career. She is beautiful, awakens the debauchery and fornication sentimental Michel, worship God in holy trinity Régis.Cette will merge to better highlight their differences. Michael is secretly in love first, leaving their romance two platonic lovers.
But Anne-Marie, the two are complementary, she feels the need to share moments with both. Michel eventually take action and wanton Anne-Marie, who will end up losing because of nostalgia for a lost faith and regrettée.Entre two considerations about the music, the great and beautiful (according to the author), we witnessing profound debates theological and ultimately life, for faith influences the character and actions of each.
Employing a style remarkable Rebatet bored sometimes as he digs his thinking and spread over too many pages. But when it comes to new rhythmic passage, the author knows how to catch and watch corrosive. We marvel when a comparison between Lyon (he hates) and Paris (which he admires), place names to the arrangements of the city and the people who populate it, Lyon is undermined and seems humiliated behind words too strong. Similarly, the passage where Michael follows a girl in the street and falls into a sordid place where he is beaten. Rebatet knows how raw and out of its classic style and Grand.
Despite its length (over 1000 pages) and his languid, "The Two Standards" is unique, that of reconciling a classic look with a language crûmment popular, that of describing situations between two bestial thoughts theological and philosophical, that of not only deal with the inner feelings of the characters without last for the frivolities of appearance. Finally the book highlights the part of the human land that seems irreversible, according Rebatet this true faith, although that seems immutable remission ever in question ...

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