“You must really begin to harden yourself to the idea of being worth looking at.”
Jane Austen book Mansfield Park
Source: Mansfield Park
June 25, 1995, p. 140
A Year With Swollen Appendices (1996)
“You must really begin to harden yourself to the idea of being worth looking at.”
Jane Austen book Mansfield Park
Source: Mansfield Park
“The unexamined life is not worth living for a human being.”
Socrates (-470–-399 BC) classical Greek Athenian philosopher
38a
Variant translations:
(More closely) The unexamining life is not worth living for a human being
The life which is unexamined is not worth living.
An unexamined life is not worth living.
The unexamined life is not the life for man.
Life without enquiry is not worth living for a man.<!--Translated by W. H. D. Rouse-->
Plato, Apology
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841–1935) United States Supreme Court justice
Speech to the Bar Association of Boston, in Speeches (1913), p. 86.
1910s
“The job of the artist is always to deepen the mystery.”
Francis Bacon (1561–1626) English philosopher, statesman, scientist, jurist, and author
George Orwell (1903–1950) English author and journalist
"Charles Dickens" (1939)
Context: The thing that drove Dickens forward into a form of art for which he was not really suited, and at the same time caused us to remember him, was simply the fact that he was a moralist, the consciousness of ‘having something to say’. He is always preaching a sermon, and that is the final secret of his inventiveness. For you can only create if you can care. Types like Squeers and Micawber could not have been produced by a hack writer looking for something to be funny about. A joke worth laughing at always has an idea behind it, and usually a subversive idea. Dickens is able to go on being funny because he is in revolt against authority, and authority is always there to be laughed at.