In Search of Lost Time, Volume VI_ Time Regained - Marcel Proust [271]
at Tansonville: 188 et sqq. Meets Vinteuil in Combray: 209–11 (cf. 302). Swann in Love: 265–543. His womanising: 269–75. Introduced to Odette; his initial indifference to her: 275–80. His essay on Vermeer: 279 (cf. 340–41, 423, 502; II 54, 146–47; IV 145). Introduced by Odette to the Verdurins: 280. His social ease and courtesy: 285–87. Hears Vinteuil’s sonata: 294; the “little phrase”:296–300, “the national anthem of their love”: 308–9 (cf. 335–37, 374–75). Visits to Odette’s house: 309–13. His penchant for comparing people to figures in the old masters: 314–17 (cf. 110, 134, 459–62, 465; II 148; V 516–17). His nocturnal search for Odette: 323–26. The cattleyas; Odette becomes his mistress: 328–32. Progress of his love: 332–50. His enthusiasm for the Verdurins: 350–54. Dines at the Verdurins’ with Forcheville: 355–75. The beginnings of his jealousy; he taps on the wrong window: 387–92. Odette lies to him: 394–99. He reads her letter to Forcheville: 400–1. Rejected by the Verdurins; his tirade against them: 403–10. Progress of his jealousy: 411–53. At Mme de Saint-Euverte’s: 458–501; conversation with the Princesse des Laumes: 483–87; the little phrase again, reminding him of the early days of his love for Odette: 490–501. Abandons hope of happiness with Odette: 502–5; hopes for her death: 504 (cf. V 641–43). The anonymous letter: 506–10, and the suspicions it arouses in him: 510–14. Interrogates Odette: 514–27. Visits brothels: 530–31. Conversation with Mme Cottard on a bus: 532–36. Dreams of Odette and Forcheville: 538–43. “A woman who wasn’t even my type”: 543. Speaks to M of Balbec church: 547. His need for gingerbread: 571. Comes to fetch his daughter from the Champs-Elysées; his prestige and glamour in M’s eyes: 576–79, 586–88. Meets M’s mother in the Trois Quartiers: 588–90. His new persona as Odette’s husband: II 1–3. Norpois’s remarks about the Swann ménage: 49–52. How the marriage came about: 52–58. His suspicions of M: 85–87. M becomes a regular visitor to his house: 103–4. His library: 111–13. His changed attitude to society: 117–31. His indifference to Odette; in love with another woman (Mme de Cambremer?): 130–34 (cf. 146–47; I 541–42; IV 426). His love for his daughter: 192–93. Bergotte’s remarks about him: 199–200. Relations with Mme Verdurin: 239–40. Has “a separate life of his own”: 246. His photograph of the Botticellian Odette: 264 (cf. V 267). Persuades the Guermantes to buy Elstir s: III 685–87. Oriane recalls her botanical expeditions with him: 708–9. Inculcates in her a taste for Empire furniture: 711, 715. His researches into the Templars: 787. M meets him at the Guermantes’; his changed appearance; his illness; his Dreyfusism; his comment on the Duke’s “Velazquez;” has only three or four months to live: 792–819. At the Princesse de Guermantes’s; said to have quarrelled with the Prince: IV 75, 98, 101–2, 138–39. His grandmother, a Protestant married to a Jew, was the Duc de Berry’s mistress: 92. The Duc de Guermantes, supported by his wife, deplores his Dreyfusism and his marriage—a double betrayal of the Faubourg Saint-Germain: 104–8. His desire to introduce his wife and daughter to Oriane before he dies: 108–9 (cf. II 57–58; V 776–80). His face grotesquely changed by illness; his Jewishness more pronounced: 121–22, 134. His preoccupation with the Dreyfus Case: 132–33, 150–54; but nevertheless desires to be buried with military honours: 152–53. Talks to M about jealousy: 139–40. Concupiscent gaze at Mme de Surgis-le-Duc’s bosom: 142, 146. Reports to M his conversation with the Prince de Guermantes: 142–52. Effect of his Dreyfusism on his wife’s social aspirations: 199–200. Casual allusion to his death: 364. Vilified by Mme Verdurin: 503–4. Charlus cites his views on Balzac: 611, 614, 623. His death in retrospect: V 260–64. Allusion to the Tissot picture of Charles Haas, of whom there are “some traces in the character of Swann”: 262–63. Charlus’s reminiscences concerning him; madly attractive to women; fought a duel with d’Osmond; had been the lover of Odette’s sister: 399–403. Recalled patronisingly