"Charles Dickens" (1939)
Context: When one reads any strongly individual piece of writing, one has the impression of seeing a face somewhere behind the page. It is not necessarily the actual face of the writer. I feel this very strongly with Swift, with Defoe, with Fielding, Stendhal, Thackeray, Flaubert, though in several cases I do not know what these people looked like and do not want to know. What one sees is the face that the writer ought to have. Well, in the case of Dickens I see a face that is not quite the face of Dickens's photographs, though it resembles it. It is the face of a man of about forty, with a small beard and a high colour. He is laughing, with a touch of anger in his laughter, but no triumph, no malignity. It is the face of a man who is always fighting against something, but who fights in the open and is not frightened, the face of a man who is generously angry — in other words, of a nineteenth-century liberal, a free intelligence, a type hated with equal hatred by all the smelly little orthodoxies which are now contending for our souls.
“When one reads these strange pages of one long gone one feels that one is at one with one who once…”
Source: Ulysses
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James Joyce 191
Irish novelist and poet 1882–1941Related quotes
“As long as my face is on page one, I don't care what they say about me on page seventeen.”
“On more than one occasion when reading Epifanio de los Santos, one reads Don Juan Valera.”
As quoted by Menendez Pelayo from Manila Spanish Daily in The Manila Tribune of April 19, 1928.
BALIW
Book I, Canto VIII, II The Revelation.
The Angel In The House (1854)
Source: Gormenghast (1950), Chapter 11 (p. 441)