Author: D. J. Taylor
Cites
- W. P. Frith (1)
- IN: Derby Day (2011) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: I felt sure that if I could find a theme capable of affording me the opportunity of showing an appreciation of the infinite variety of everyday life, I had confidence enough in my power of dealing with it successfully; but the subject - then, as now and ever, the chief difficulty - where was I to find a scene of such interest and importance as to warrant my spending months, perhaps a year or two, in representing it? Until the year of which I write - 1854 - I had never seen any of the great horse races for which England is so famous, and my first experience of the modern Olympian games was at Hampton, when the idea occured to me that if some of the salient points of the great gathering could be grouped together, an effective picture might be the result...
FROM: The Derby Day', My Autobiography and Reminiscence, (1887), Book, UK
- William Empson (1)
- IN: The Windsor Faction (2013) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: The object of life, after all, is not to understand things, but to maintain one's defences and equilibrium and live as well as one can; it is not only maiden aunts who are placed like this.
FROM: Seven Types of Ambiguity, (1930), NULL, UK
- W. H. Auden (1)
- IN: The Windsor Faction (2013) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: Always the following wind of history
Of others' wisdom makes a bouyant air
Till we come suddenly on pockets where
Is nothing loud but us.
FROM: Paid on Both Sides', (1930), Poem, US/England