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“I realised I've got quite a talent for coming up with ideas for design. I've got so many ideas about fashion.”
John Caudwell“I realised I've got quite a talent for coming up with ideas for design. I've got so many ideas about fashion.”
John Caudwell“The power of fear of failure, with will to win, is an incredible force. I don't think we should be worried about having a fear of failure; I think it's quite natural. If you surveyed any top businessman or any top athlete, I bet if they were truthful, they would all say they've got a fear of losing and a fear of failure.”
John Caudwell“Things, since you left, have not gone well with me: they have taken me from a place where there was gin to a place where there is no gin[.]”
Sarah Caudwell“In order to deceive others, it is necessary also to deceive oneself. The actor playing Hamlet must indeed believe that he is the Prince of Denmark, though when he leaves the stage he will usually remember who he really is. On the other hand, when someone's entire life is based on pretense, they will seldom if ever return to reality. That is the secret of successful politicians, evangelists and confidence tricksters—they believe that they are telling the truth, even when they know that they have faked the evidence. Sincerity, my dear Julia, is a quality not to be trusted.”
Sarah Caudwell, The Sibyl in Her Grave“I had already established, as you know, that it was logically impossible for Kenneth to be distressed by anything that might occur between Ned and myself; but Kenneth, being an artist, has perhaps not studied logic and is unaware of the impossibility.”
Sarah Caudwell, Thus Was Adonis Murdered“On my first day in London I made an early start. Reaching the Public Record Office not much after ten, I soon secured the papers I needed for my research and settled in my place. I became, as is the way of the scholar, so deeply absorbed as to lose all consciousness of my surroundings or of the passage of time. When at last I came to myself, it was almost eleven and I was quite exhausted: I knew I could not prudently continue without refreshment.”
Sarah Caudwell, Thus Was Adonis Murdered“Julia's unhappy relationship with the Inland Revenue was due to her omission, during four years of modestly successful practice at the Bar, to pay any income tax. The truth is, I think, that she did not, in her heart of hearts, really believe in income tax. It was a subject which she had studied for examinations and on which she had thereafter advised a number of clients: she naturally did not suppose, in these circumstances, that it had anything to do with real life.”
Sarah Caudwell, Thus Was Adonis Murdered“Complexity is not an aesthetic criterion. It is a quality associated only with division and organization of labor.”
Christopher Caudwell, Illusion and Reality: A Study of the Sources of Poetry“[EM] Forster was the only living writer whom he would have described as his master. In other people’s books he found examples of style which he wanted to imitate and learn from. In Forster he found a key to the whole art of writing. The Zen masters of archery—of whom, in those days, Christopher had never heard—start by teaching you the mental attitude with which you must pick up the bow. A Forster novel taught Christopher the mental attitude with which he must pick up the pen.”
Christopher Isherwood“knowledge without application is like a book that is never read' Christopher Crawford, Hemel Hempstead.”
Christopher Crawford