Rohmer, having set up the tape recorder himself, continued to conduct
the interview. He neither solicits nor suffers any prompting and heads
straight to the point: "It's the past in itself which interests me. I
make no attempt to modernize. I want to make people appreciate the past
and the art of the past. We have inherited a great tradition and must
not lose it through laziness."
It is perhaps unwise to ask the
dedicated professor of the past why his suject is so important to a
modern audience if he makes no attempt to relate it to the present.
Unconvinced by my simple question, Rohmer paused for the first time.
"But surely you feel the reason," he said rather plaintively. Then he
sighed and in a resigned tone continued, "I'll explain why the past is
important in modern terms, if that's what you want."
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