"Perfect Knowledge in Final Things" (p. 108)
Private Lives in the Imperial City (1979)
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William Blake 249
English Romantic poet and artist 1757–1827Related quotes

“I can't imagine a man really enjoying a book and reading it only once.”
Letter to Arthur Greeves (February 1932) — in They Stand Together: The Letters of C. S. Lewis to Arthur Greeves (1914–1963) (1979), p. 439
“We only have now! Everything else is either imagination or memory.”
Source: Life, the Truth, and Being Free (2010), p. 131

Source: Where I'm Calling From: New and Selected Stories
Source: The Night We Buried Road Dog (1993), p. 469

“Faith ― acceptance of which we imagine to be true, that which we cannot prove.”
Source: The Da Vinci Code

Question, Léger once called you a realist. How do you feel about this?
1950s - 1960s, interview with Alexander Calder', (1962)

The Paris Review interview (1984)
Context: I let characters and symbols emerge from me, as if I were dreaming. I always use what remains of my dreams of the night before. Dreams are reality at its most profound, and what you invent is truth because invention, by its nature, can’t be a lie. Writers who try to prove something are unattractive to me, because there is nothing to prove and everything to imagine. So I let words and images emerge from within. If you do that, you might prove something in the process.