“Joyce acquits Blake peremptorily of the charges of insanity and vague mysticism: For the first, 'To say that a great genius is mad, is no better than to say he is a rheumatic or diabetic.' For the second, he was a mystic only insofar as he could be one and remain an artist; his mysticism was no swooning ecstasy like that of St. John of the Cross, but a western mysticism filled with an 'innate sense of form and the coordinating power of the intellect.” GeniusMadnessMysticismBlakeJoyce Book:James Joyce Source: James Joyce
“Drift beautifully on the surface, and you will die unbeautifully in the depths.” DiesDepthSurface Book:Oscar Wilde Source: Oscar Wilde
“A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is in fact the gestation of a soul.” MenSoulFactsYoungArtistYoung ManPortraitsGestation Author:Richard Ellmann
“Historians of literature like to regard a century as a series of ten faces, each grimacing in a different way.” WayDifferentFacesLiteratureHistoryCenturyTenRegardSeriesDifferent WaysHistorian Author:Richard Ellmann