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. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 46
Page 80
I am told that there are natural singers and made singers . Though of course he must have something of a voice the made singer owes the better part of his accomplishment to training ; with taste and musical ability [ 80 ] THE SUMMING UP.
I am told that there are natural singers and made singers . Though of course he must have something of a voice the made singer owes the better part of his accomplishment to training ; with taste and musical ability [ 80 ] THE SUMMING UP.
Page 134
When I say that plays are ephemeral , I am of course not speaking of plays in verse ; the greatest and noblest of the arts can lend its own life to the humble partner ; I am speaking of the plays in prose with which our modern theatre ...
When I say that plays are ephemeral , I am of course not speaking of plays in verse ; the greatest and noblest of the arts can lend its own life to the humble partner ; I am speaking of the plays in prose with which our modern theatre ...
Page 138
He owes his origi nality to an idiosyncrasy , not of course peculiar to himself , that had never before found expression on the stage . The English , whatever they were in the Elizabethan era , are not an amorous race .
He owes his origi nality to an idiosyncrasy , not of course peculiar to himself , that had never before found expression on the stage . The English , whatever they were in the Elizabethan era , are not an amorous race .
What people are saying - Write a review
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified
LibraryThing Review
User Review - hellbent - LibraryThingThis is one of the best books I read for providing a philosophical view of life. It is a book I intend to read again. Read full review
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able accept action actors admire appearance artist asked attention audience beauty believe better called cause character claim common concerned course critic deal difficult discover drama dramatist easy effect emotion English exciting existence experience eyes fact feeling follow forced gave give given hard human ideas imagination important instinct interest knew knowledge known least less literature live longer look matter meaning mind nature never novel offer once one's passing perfect perhaps persons philosophers picture play pleasure possible present produced prose reader reason seemed seen sense sometimes sort speak spirit story success suppose taken tell theatre things thought tion told took truth turn universe wanted whole write written wrote young youth