On where his loyalty lies. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/forum/566535.stm
“…Australian English may be thought of as a kind of fossilised Cockney of the Dickensian era.”
Non-Fiction, A Mouthful of Air: Language and Languages, Especially English (1992)
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Anthony Burgess 297
English writer 1917–1993Related quotes
Preface to A Gallery of Literary Portraits, William Tait, Edinburgh 1845
Other Quotes
Thomas Warton The History of English Poetry (1774-81) vol. 3, p. 27.
Criticism
The Story of Australia's People: The Rise and Rise of a New Australia (2016)
1840s, Essays: First Series (1841), History
On her career as an actress in the U.S, in an interview on Kelly & Michael (2 July 2014) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Q1OzzG5S24
Banned by Free Republic? https://archive.is/20120529012553/vdare.com/sailer/Free_Republic.htm
introduction-John Hollander ed.'Committed to Memory' Riverhead Books New York 1996
The Law of Mind (1892)
Context: In an article published in The Monist for January, 1891, I endeavored to show what ideas ought to form the warp of a system of philosophy, and particularly emphasized that of absolute chance. In the number of April, 1892, I argued further in favor of that way of thinking, which it will be convenient to christen tychism (from τύχη, chance). A serious student of philosophy will be in no haste to accept or reject this doctrine; but he will see in it one of the chief attitudes which speculative thought may take, feeling that it is not for an individual, nor for an age, to pronounce upon a fundamental question of philosophy. That is a task for a whole era to work out. I have begun by showing that tychism must give birth to an evolutionary cosmology, in which all the regularities of nature and of mind are regarded as products of growth, and to a Schelling-fashioned idealism which holds matter to be mere specialized and partially deadened mind.