The Summing Up, Part 354, Volume 1This book represents Maugham's life and philosophy in his own words. It is autobiographical in nature, though most of the work is concerned with Maugham's unique and fascinating opinions on the theatre, writing, metaphysics and the interesting people he encountered in his long and successful career. |
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Page 134
... reason why they should be less interesting ; and if by the time the play has run its course they are out of date , what of it ? The play is dead anyway . Now to this question the an- swer is that there is no reason at all . if he can ...
... reason why they should be less interesting ; and if by the time the play has run its course they are out of date , what of it ? The play is dead anyway . Now to this question the an- swer is that there is no reason at all . if he can ...
Page 251
... reason to follow them except in so far as they suited his con- venience . Having then an epigrammatic turn , and epigrams being the fashion , I put my conviction into a phrase and said to myself : follow your inclinations with due ...
... reason to follow them except in so far as they suited his con- venience . Having then an epigrammatic turn , and epigrams being the fashion , I put my conviction into a phrase and said to myself : follow your inclinations with due ...
Page 309
... reason would have no truck with . In de- fault of anything better it has seemed to me some- times that I might pretend to myself that the good- ness I have not so seldom after all come across in many of those I have encountered on my ...
... reason would have no truck with . In de- fault of anything better it has seemed to me some- times that I might pretend to myself that the good- ness I have not so seldom after all come across in many of those I have encountered on my ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept action actors admire æsthetic amusing appearance artist asked audience beauty believe better character comedy common conscious course crasy critic deal delight dialogue discover Dr Johnson drama dramatist effect emotion English evil exciting existence experience eyes fact feeling fiction forced French gave Gerald du Maurier gift give Goethe hard Henry Arthur Jones Human Bondage human nature humour ideas idiosyncrasy imagination instinct interest invention Jack Straw knew knowledge Kuno Fischer Lady Frederick literature live Liza of Lambeth look matter Matthew Arnold meaning mind ness never notion novel novelist one's pattern perfect perhaps philosophers phrase picture play pleasure produced prose reader reason seemed sense sometimes sort soul spirit St Thomas's Hospital Stendhal success suppose tell theatre things thought tion told truth verse Walter Pater wanted words write written wrote young youth