The lonely inmate turns into a tragic figure in his own imagination, and pours his heart out on canvas or paper as his revenge on a heartless world. He may even turn into a snob, and look upon the rest of the world with pity, for his own heart is full of joy. Even the ailing and the suffering can develop a form of snobbery, as Aldous Huxley had once said. Not on such a scale or in exactly the same form, but the Parisian garret has its counterparts elsewhere.