On the Spur of Kundera: Broch's "The Sleepwalkers"

Decided to take up Broch again: this time his The Sleepwalkers.

Re Joachim's passion for Ruzena (Bohemian/Czech girl he met at the casino):
 Love meant to take refuge from one's own world in another's . . .
Re "conventional feeling" and Joachim's brother's death from a duel:
 Bertrand went on:
"We take it quite as a matter of course that two men, both of them honourable--for your brother would not have fought with a man who was not honourable--should of a morning stand and shoot at each other. And the fact that we put up with such a thing, and that they do it, shows how completely imprisoned we all are in conventional feeling. But feelings are inert, and that's why they're so cruel. The world is ruled by the inertia of feeling."
 

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