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For Proust, Ruskin's concern for the little man had effected a kind of resurrection, one characteristic of great art. He had known how to look at this figure, and had hence brought it back to life for succeeding generations. Ever polite, Proust offered a playful apology to the little figure for what would have been his own inability to notice him without Ruskin as a guide ("I would not have been clever enough to find you, amongst the thousands of stones in our towns, to pick out your figure, to rediscover your personality, to summon you, to make you live again"). It was a symbol of what Ruskin had done for Proust, and what all books might do for their readers--namely, bring back to life, from the deadness caused by habit and inattention, valuable yet neglected aspects of experience.
How Proust Can Change Your Life by Alain de Botton
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