Sleep Fictions: A Digital Companion

I.3 Hudson

Rowland, the reader quickly learns, is a failed flâneur. The narrator explains that he lacks the role’s “prime requisite . . . the simple, sensuous, confident relish of pleasure." His protestant upbringing prevents him from being an “irresponsibly contemplative nature," but neither is he “a sturdily practical one." Rowland feels he is wholly made up of contradictions: “[H]e was forever looking in vain for the uses of the things that please and the charm of things that sustain. He was an awkward mixture of strong moral impulse and restless aesthetic curiosity, and yet he would have made a most ineffective reformer and a very indifferent artist." 

A quick Wiki perusal reveals that, like Rowland, the figure of the flâneur is paradoxically an idle loafer and an active participant in an urban environment.

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