Marcel Proust, The Guermantes Way
– You know… Ignacio, may I call you by your first name?
It was a strange question. After all, we had been meeting for months now, over a year, perhaps two, and had long since become friends.
– Ignatius, my friend, I replied, slightly unsettled as I always am when someone alters my name. Ignatius del Amaro. That’s how I’ve always been called.
For some time, I had found myself wondering what it was that Lucian wrote whenever, as friends do, we would talk about this and that. It seemed almost a professional habit of his—he was, after all, a psychiatrist. Yet in recent days, I had grown nearly certain that he was not writing at all. The movements of his hand and wrist were far too broad, too sweeping, for ordinary writing. He was drawing.
More than that, I had, without quite knowing why, after a sudden, uncontrollable impulse rising from deep within me, and quite against all propriety, intruded for an instant into his private space. I had caught a brief glimpse of his notebook and recognized the style, yes, unmistakably, the hand, of his drawings. There was a kind of signature in them that reminded me of a picture that had struck me once, long ago, in a gallery abroad. I had bought it and later brought it to him, hoping he might analyze it. The piece was rather large, so we had hung it on his wall, for convenience, to study it more closely.
A curious feeling came over me, a confusion mingled with a flicker of satisfaction that made me blush slightly.
I was stunned. I couldn’t stop myself from asking:
– This image we’ve been discussing… are you its author?
– For my part, he said, with an unusual hint of confusion, I had the feeling I was encountering it, if I may put it that way, for the second time. And when you asked me to analyze it, it didn’t take long for me to realize that, quite surprisingly, it had become utterly foreign to me.

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