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Arnold Bennett

Literary Taste: How to Form It / With Detailed Instructions for Collecting a Complete Library of English Literature

  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    There is even no essential, definable difference between those two great branches, prose and poetry.
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    The eye must be flattered; the hand must be flattered; the sense of owning must be flattered. Sacrifices must be made for the acquisition of literature. That which has cost a sacrifice is always endeared. A
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    understanding appreciation of literature means an understanding appreciation of the world, and it means nothing else
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    The aim of literary study is not to amuse the hours of leisure; it is to awake oneself, it is to be alive, to intensify one's capacity for pleasure, for sympathy, and for comprehension. It is not to affect one hour, but twenty-four hours. It is to change utterly one's relations with the world
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    The makers of literature are those who have seen and felt the miraculous interestingness of the universe. And the greatest makers of literature are those whose vision has been the widest, and whose feeling has been the most intense
  • fdiahhas quoted7 years ago
    You can. You ought. Amid all the miracles of the universe you had just wakened up to one. You were full of your discovery. You were under a divine impulsion to impart that discovery. You had a strong sense of the marvellous beauty of something, and you had to share it. You were in a passion about something, and you had to vent yourself on somebody. You were drawn towards the whole of the rest of the human race.
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