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Joined: 3/7/2009 Posts: 26,596 Neurons: 78,966 Location: Inside Farlex computers
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 It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance…and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process. Henry James (1843-1916)
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Joined: 1/28/2015 Posts: 5,295 Neurons: 2,911,771 Location: Kolkata, Bengal, India
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Quotation of the Day
It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance…and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process.
Henry James (1843-1916)
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 Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 5/1/2017 Posts: 199 Neurons: 167,297 Location: Casablanca, Grand Casablanca, Morocco
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As a matter of fact, art boosts creativity, stirs our minds and opens our eyes to investigate and change our realities.
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Joined: 2/4/2014 Posts: 6,886 Neurons: 4,933,633 Location: Bogotá, Bogota D.C., Colombia
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Context from : The Letters of Henry JamesLetters, 1915, to H. G. Wells21 Carlyle Mansions, Cheyne Walk, S.W. July 10th, 1915. My dear Wells, I am bound to tell you that I don’t think your letter makes out any sort of case for the bad manners of “Boon,” as far as your indulgence in them at the expense of your poor old H. J. is concerned — I say “your” simply because he has been yours, in the most liberal, continual, sacrificial, the most admiring and abounding critical way, ever since he began to know your writings: as to which you have had copious testimony. Your comparison of the book to a waste-basket strikes me as the reverse of felicitous, for what one throws into that receptacle is exactly what one doesn’t commit to publicity and make the affirmation of one’s estimate of one’s contemporaries by. I should liken it much rather to the preservative portfolio or drawer in which what is withheld from the basket is savingly laid away. Nor do I feel it anywhere evident that my “view of life and literature,” or what you impute to me as such, is carrying everything before it and becoming a public menace — so unaware do I seem, on the contrary, that my products constitute an example in any measurable degree followed or a cause in any degree successfully pleaded: I can’t but think that if this were the case I should find it somewhat attested in their circulation — which, alas, I have reached a very advanced age in the entirely defeated hope of. But I have no view of life and literature, I maintain, other than that our form of the latter in especial is admirable exactly by its range and variety, its plasticity and liberality, its fairly living on the sincere and shifting experience of the individual practitioner. That is why I have always so admired your so free and strong application of it, the particular rich receptacle of intelligences and impressions emptied out with an energy of its own, that your genius constitutes; and that is in particular why, in my letter of two or three days since I pronounced it curious and interesting that you should find the case I constitute myself only ridiculous and vacuous to the extent of your having to proclaim your sense of it. The curiosity and the interest, however, in this latter connection are of course for my mind those of the break of perception (perception of the veracity of my variety) on the part of a talent so generally inquiring and apprehensive as yours. Of course for myself I live, live intensely and am fed by life, and my value, whatever it be, is in my own kind of expression of that. Therefore I am pulled up to wonder by the fact that for you my kind (my sort of sense of expression and sort of sense of life alike) doesn’t exist; and that wonder is, I admit, a disconcerting comment on my idea of the various appreciability of our addiction to the novel and of all the personal and intellectual history, sympathy and curiosity, behind the given example of it. It is when that history and curiosity have been determined in the way most different from my own that I want to get at them — precisely for the extension of life, which is the novel’s best gift. But that is another matter. Meanwhile I absolutely dissent from the claim that there are any differences whatever in the amenability to art of forms of literature aesthetically determined, and hold your distinction between a form that is (like) painting and a form that is (like) architecture for wholly null and void. There is no sense in which architecture is aesthetically “for use” that doesn’t leave any other art whatever exactly as much so; and so far from that of literature being irrelevant to the literary report upon life, and to its being made as interesting as possible, I regard it as relevant in a degree that leaves everything else behind. It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance, for our consideration and application of these things, and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process. If I were Boon I should say that any pretence of such a substitute is helpless and hopeless humbug; but I wouldn’t be Boon for the world, and am only yours faithfully, Henry James https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/j/james/henry/letters/chapter8.html
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 Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 6/4/2015 Posts: 1,775 Neurons: 586,893 Location: Vinton, Iowa, United States
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It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance…and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process.
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 Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 1/15/2015 Posts: 370 Neurons: 277,701 Location: Tallahassee, Florida, United States
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 hallelujah !
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Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 3/26/2013 Posts: 2,700 Neurons: 203,324 Location: Minsk, Minskaya Voblasts', Belarus
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Daemon wrote:It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance…and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process. Henry James (1843-1916) Yeah. It isn’t art itself, but the act of creation, which so magnificently instills object at hands with beauty and force...
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Joined: 9/22/2017 Posts: 68 Neurons: 193,484 Location: Camarma de Esteruelas, Madrid, Spain
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And if you mix art and science you get awesome stuff as videogames :P Thank you!
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