Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Quote on Literature by Arnold Bennett


A tasty tidbit from Arnold Bennett’s Literary Taste: How to Form It (1909)

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… The spirit of literature is unifying; it joins the candle and the star, and by the magic of an image shows that the beauty of the greater is in the less.
It is well to remind ourselves that literature is first and last a means of life, and that the enterprise of forming one’s literary taste is an enterprise of learning how best to use this means of life. People who don’t want to live, people who would sooner hibernate than feel intensely, will be wise to eschew literature. They had better, to quote from the finest passage in a fine poem, “sit around and eat blackberries.” The sight of a “common bush afire with God” might upset their nerves.
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3 comments:

the Ink Slinger said...

Good stuff! I'll have to check out that book sometime... :)

Carol in Oregon said...

One for my journal. Excellent!

Thank you, Hope.

Leslie said...

Love this quote! I sent it to my book club. =)