http://www.qern.org/en/robert-fisk-on-anonymous-internet-cowards-like-david-toube/.
“The digressions [ in Homer] are not meant to keep the reader in suspense … An episode that will increase suspense by retarding the action must be so constructed that it will not fill the present entirely, will not put the crisis, whose resolution is being awaited, entirely out of the reader’s mind, and thereby destroy the mood of suspense; the crisis and the suspense must continue, must remain vibrant in the background. But Homer—and to this we shall have to return later—knows no background. What he narrates is for the time being the only present, and fills both the stage and the reader’s mind completely.”
Source: Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (1946), p. 4
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Erich Auerbach 7
German Philologist 1892–1957Related quotes

“Suspense is worse than disappointment.”
Letter to Thomas Sloan, (1 September 1791)

“With him suspension of judgment is a system.”
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.

“As yet unfold the event on no pretense,
'Tis your chief task to keep us in suspense.”
Primus at ille labor versu tenuisse legentem
Suspensum, incertumque dia qui denique rerum
Eventus maneant.
Book I, line 98
De Arte Poetica (1527)

Pyrrho, 11.
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers (c. 200 A.D.), Book 9: Uncategorized philosophers and Skeptics
“Show me a character whose life arouses my curiosity, and my flesh begins crawling with suspense.”
Los Angeles Times Home Magazine (Feb. 20, 1977)
“It is now life and not art that requires the willing suspension of disbelief.”
"The Novel Alive or Dead," A Gathering of Fugitives: New Essays (1956)

“That willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith.”
Source: Biographia Literaria (1817), Ch. XIV

“The anguish of suspense made men even desire the arrival of the enemy.”
Boule de Suif (1880)
Context: Life seemed to have stopped short; the shops were shut, the streets deserted. Now and then an inhabitant, awed by the silence, glided swiftly by in the shadow of the walls. The anguish of suspense made men even desire the arrival of the enemy.