The Private Papers of Henry RyecroftE.P. Dutton, 1903 - 279 pàgines |
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amid assuredly Avlona beauty better brain calm civilization comfort common course degra delight Devon doubt dread England English Englishman enjoy Euston Road eyes fact feel flowers foxgloves garden George Gissing Goethe habit hand happy hear heart heaven HENRY RYECROFT Holywell Street hope hour human idle imagine intellectual Islington knew Knightsbridge labour lentils less literary live London look mankind meadows means memory merely mind mood moral morning mutton natural never night noble Odysseus once one's Paestum passed Pausanias peace perhaps Pharisee pleasure poor Port-Royal Puritanism quiet reason remember savour seems sense Shakespeare solace solitude soul sound street suffered sure talk things thought Tibullus to-day toil Topsham Tottenham Court Road truth turn utter virtue voice volume walk whilst window wonder word
Passatges populars
Pàgina 11 - When I was running about this town a very poor fellow, I was a great arguer for the advantages of poverty; but I was, at the same time, very sorry to be poor. Sir, all the arguments which are brought to represent poverty as no evil, show it to be evidently a great evil. You never find people labouring• to convince you that you may live very happily upon a plentiful fortune. So you hear people talking how miserable a king must be ; and yet they all wish to be in his place.
Pàgina 188 - Custom-House experience was not such a thraldom and weariness ; my mind and heart were free. Oh, labor is the curse of the world, and nobody can meddle with it without becoming proportionably brutified ! Is it a praiseworthy matter that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses ? It is not so.
Pàgina 41 - I am no friend of the people. As a force, by which the tenor of the time is .conditioned, they inspire me with distrust, with fear ; as a visible multitude, they make me shrink aloof, and often move me to abhorrence. . . . Every instinct of my being is anti-democratic, and I dread to think of what our England may become when Demos rules irresistibly.
Pàgina 42 - Take a man by himself, and there is generally some reason to be found in him, some disposition for good ; mass him with his fellows in the social organism, and ten to one he becomes a blatant creature, without a thought of his own, ready for any evil to which contagion prompts him. It is because nations tend to stupidity and baseness that mankind moves so slowly ; it is because individuals have a capacity for better things that it moves at all.
Pàgina viii - Kyecroft," is here among his characters, speaking of the things he has known, with the vexed courage of resignation. Naturally a man of independent and rather scornful spirit, he had suffered much from defeated ambition, from disillusions of many kinds, from subjection to grim necessity; the result of it, at the time of which I am speaking, was, certainly not a broken spirit, but a mind and temper so sternly disciplined, that, in ordinary intercourse with him, one did not know but that he led a calm,...
Pàgina 49 - ... then ? With a lifetime of dread experience behind me, I say that he who encourages any young man or woman to look for his living to literature, commits no less than a crime.
Pàgina 53 - Art as: an expression, satisfying and abiding, of the zest of life. This is applicable to every form of Art devised by man, for, in his creative moment, whether he produce a great drama or carve a piece of foliage in wood, the artist is moved and inspired by supreme enjoyment of some aspect of the world about him ; an enjoyment...
Pàgina 253 - science" because of my conviction that, for long to come if not for ever, it will be the remorseless enemy of mankind. I see it destroying all simplicity and gentleness of life, all the beauty of the world ; I see it restoring barbarism under a mask of civilization; I see it darkening men's minds and hardening their hearts; I see it bringing a time of vast conflicts, which will pale into insignificance "the thousand wars of old...
Pàgina 64 - Unfortunately for this argument, education is a thing of which only the few are capable; teach as you will only a small percentage will profit by your most zealous energy.
Pàgina 46 - I had been without a care! It astounds me to remember that, having breakfasted on dry bread, and carrying in my pocket another piece of bread to serve for dinner, I settled myself at a desk in the great Reading Room with books before me which by no possibility could be a source of immediate profit. At such a time I worked through German tomes on Ancient Philosophy. At such a time, I read Appuleius and Lucian, Petronius and the Greek Anthology, Diogenes Laertius and — Heaven knows what! My hunger...