“One learns one’s mystery at the price of one’s innocence.”
“Her face was that of a boy gang-leader, smooth with the innocence of one who, by the same quirk as blinds a man to the mystery of whistling or riding a bicycle, has never mastered the art of affection or compassion or properly learned the moral dichotomy.”
Fiction, The Enemy in the Blanket (1958)
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Anthony Burgess 297
English writer 1917–1993Related quotes

The Education of Henry Adams (1907)

“You can only learn so much by reading. You cannot learn to ride a bicycle by reading a book.”
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1930s, My Credo (1932)
Context: The most beautiful and deepest experience a man can have is the sense of the mysterious. It is the underlying principle of religion as well as all serious endeavor in art and science. He who never had this experience seems to me, if not dead, then at least blind. To sense that behind anything that can be experienced there is a something that our mind cannot grasp and whose beauty and sublimity reaches us only indirectly and as a feeble reflection, this is religiousness.
In this sense I am religious. To me it suffices to wonder at these secrets and to attempt humbly to grasp with my mind a mere image of the lofty structure of all that there is.

“I thought of that while riding my bicycle.”

I – The Good General.
"Generals and Generalship" (1939)

The Bicycle
Don Camillo and the Prodigal Sun (1952)