2956.
 Then the Archbishop of Turin came to the monastery to give an important
 presentation. He had with him a set of plans for the reconstruction of 
the chapel that was on the monastery’s grounds. This chapel had not been
 used since the roof had caved in years ago. It had been build in the 
romanesque style, and the archbishop had with him drawings showing an 
enlarged chapel which was going to incorporate the new pointed arches.
 2957.
 The monks of the monastery had been hearing strange rumors of the new 
pointed arches and they did not know what to make of it. First of all 
they could not even imagine what the term, “Pointed arch,” meant, and 
there was nobody who had yet seen one. What was known was that these 
pointed arches had been invented somewhere in France, and so the Italian
 monks of the monastery were prejudiced against them to start with.
 2958.
 The archbishop began his presentation by belittling the existing chapel
 and criticizing its construction. He did not come out and say it, but 
he implied that it was the old-fashioned half circle arches of its doors
 and windows that were responsible for the collapse of the roof years 
ago. The archbishop was very proud of his presentation and especially 
with the drawings on parchment which explained, in a kind of schematic 
way, the shapes of the doors and windows in the new style.
2959. Then, it the middle of the silence occasioned by the unfolding of the drawing, while everyone was bending over a big oak table trying to get a better look, the old man started muttering to himself. This is what he said.




 
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