Author: Paul Horgan
Cites
- Edith Sitwell (1)
- IN: Things As They Are (1964) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Praise we the just-
Who are not come to judge, but bless
Immortal things in their poor mortal dress.
FROM: The Outcasts, "Praise We Great Men", (1962), Poem, UK
- Jean, translated by Forrest, Frances Guitton (1)
- IN: Things As They Are (1964) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Hugo said that to grow old was to possess all ages and the essence of each one, particularly that of childhood; that which the child represents to adults, something he himself does not understand or experience: newness, and the sense of existence in the process of both, the idea of a new world about to be born.
FROM: Journals, 1952-1955, (1955), Journal, NULL
- Maurice Baring (1)
- IN: Things As They Are (1964) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: During all this time there were two worlds of which one gradually became conscious: the inside world and the outside world.
FROM: The Puppet Show of Memory, (1922), Book, UK