ARNOLD BENNETT QUOTES III

British novelist & playwright (1867-1931)

A man's duty is to keep his end up.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life

Tags: duty


Literature can appeal to the soul only through the mind. Music goes direct. Its language is a language which the soul alone understands, but which the soul can never translate.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Sacred and Profane Love

Tags: music


The foundation of England's greatness is that Englishmen hate to look fools.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Tales of the Five Towns


The artist who is too sensitive for contacts with the non-artistic world is thereby too sensitive for his vocation, and fit only to fall into gentle ecstasies over the work of artists less sensitive than himself.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Author's Craft

Tags: artists


Beware of undertaking too much at the start. Be content with quite a little. Allow for accidents. Allow for human nature, especially your own.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Best of Arnold Bennett


Does there, I wonder, exist a being who has read all, or approximately all, that the person of average culture is supposed to have read, and that not to have read is a social sin? If such a being does exist, surely he is an old, a very old man.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett


A test of a first-rate work, and a test of your sincerity in calling it a first-rate work, is that you finish it.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Things That Have Interested Me


If egotism means a terrific interest in one's self, egotism is absolutely essential to efficient living.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day


Every scene, even the commonest, is wonderful, if only one can detach oneself, casting off all memory of use and custom, and behold it (as it were) for the first time; in its right, authentic colors; without making comparisons.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett


Because her instinct has told her, or because she has been reliably informed, the faded virgin knows that the supreme joys are not for her; she knows by a process of the intellect; but she can feel her deprivation no more than the young mother can feel the hardship of the virgin's lot.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett

Tags: virginity


You can turn over a new leaf every hour if you choose.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day


Worry is a form of friction. The task of the expert in life is to run his machine with the maximum of activity and the minimum of friction. If he stops or slows the machine because he cannot otherwise deal with the friction, then life has beaten him.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life

Tags: worry


Yes books are valuable. But not reading of books will take the place of a daily, candid, honest examination of what one has recently done, and what one is about to do -- of a steady looking at one's self in the face (disconcerting though the sight may be).

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day


Worry sits on the countenance of nearly every season ticket-holder in the morning train and in the evening train. You see it in the streets, offices, and restaurants, and you can even meet it in the country lanes. The habit of worrying infallibly leaves its mark, and the mark is there for all to notice.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life


The price of justice is eternal publicity.

ARNOLD BENNETT

"Secret Trials", Things That Have Interested Me

Tags: justice


Journalists say a thing that they know isn't true, in the hope that if they keep on saying it long enough it will be true.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Title