Josephine Butler (1828–1906) British feminist
1870 https://attackingthedevil.co.uk/related/lovers.php
Letter to Thomas Sloan, (1 September 1791)
Josephine Butler (1828–1906) British feminist
1870 https://attackingthedevil.co.uk/related/lovers.php
John Maynard Keynes book Essays in Persuasion
Essays in Persuasion (1931), Social Consequences of Changes in The Value of Money (1923)
“With him suspension of judgment is a system.”
Richard Francis Burton (1821–1890) British explorer, geographer, translator, writer, soldier, orientalist, cartographer, ethnologist, spy, lin…
The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî (1870), Note I : Hâjî Abdû, The Man
Context: The Hâjî regrets the excessive importance attached to a possible future state: he looks upon this as a psychical stimulant, a day dream, whose revulsion and reaction disorder waking life. The condition may appear humble and prosaic to those exalted by the fumes of Fancy, by a spiritual dram-drinking which, like the physical, is the pursuit of an ideal happiness. But he is too wise to affirm or to deny the existence of another world. For life beyond the grave there is no consensus of mankind… Even the instinctive sense of our kind is here dumb. We may believe what we are taught: we can know nothing. He would, therefore, cultivate that receptive mood which, marching under the shadow of mighty events, leads to the highest of goals, — the development of Humanity. With him suspension of judgment is a system.
“I'd rather be pleasantly surprised than fatally disappointed.”
Julia Glass (1956) Novelist, journalist, editor
Source: I See You Everywhere
“… recognizing that there is more heartbreak in continuous disappointment than a void…”
Emily Giffin (1972) American writer
Source: Heart of the Matter
“There is no disappointment so numbing… as someone no better than you achieving more.”
Joseph Heller (1923–1999) American author
“It is now life and not art that requires the willing suspension of disbelief.”
Lionel Trilling (1905–1975) American academic
"The Novel Alive or Dead," A Gathering of Fugitives: New Essays (1956)
John C. Maxwell (1947) American author, speaker and pastor
Book Sometimes you win Sometimes you Learn
“That willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith.”
Samuel Taylor Coleridge book Biographia Literaria
Source: Biographia Literaria (1817), Ch. XIV