
Letter to Cassandra (November 1800) [Letters of Jane Austen -- Brabourne Edition]
Letters
Source: The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), Ch. 1.
Letter to Cassandra (November 1800) [Letters of Jane Austen -- Brabourne Edition]
Letters
Source: The Subversion of Christianity (1984), p. 124
15 January 1753
Letters to His Son on the Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a Gentleman (1774)
Euro Trash Cinema magazine interview (March 1996)
These statements have been misattributed to Mandela, as being in his inaugural speech of 10 May 1994 http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/mandela.html but this is not the case. Rather, they originate with author Marianne Williamson.
Misattributed
“A poem does invite, it does require.”
Source: The Life of Poetry (1949), Chapter One : The Fear of Poetry, p. 8
Context: A poem does invite, it does require. What does it invite? A poem invites you to feel. More than that: it invites you to respond. And better than that: a poem invites a total response.
This response is total, but it is reached through the emotions. A fine poem will seize your imagination intellectually — that is, when you reach it, you will reach it intellectually too — but the way is through emotion, through what we call feeling.
“Correction does much, but encouragement does more.”