“Speaking about time’s relentless passage, Powell’s narrator compares certain stages of experience to the game of Russian Billiards as once he used to play it with a long vanished girlfriend. A game in which, he says, “...at the termination of a given passage of time...the hidden gate goes down...and all scoring is doubled. This is perhaps an image of how we live. For reasons not always at the time explicable, there are specific occasions when events begin suddenly to take on a significance previously unsuspected; so that before we really know where we are, life seems to have begun in earnest at last, and we ourselves, scarcely aware that any change has taken place, are careering uncontrollably down the slippery avenues of eternity."”
Anthony Powell“Already a connoisseur of boredom, Tony extended his acquaintance with Salisbury's furnished lodgings and the cheap residential hotels of Andover.”
Hilary Spurling, Anthony Powell: Dancing to the Music of Time“Much of his time at Oxford passed by his own account under a dark cloud of listlessness and depression. He was dismayed by the undergraduates' relentless snobbery and unremitting emphasis on money.”
Hilary Spurling, Anthony Powell: Dancing to the Music of Time“Parents are sometimes a bit of a disappointment to their children. They don't fulfill the promise of their early years.”
Anthony Powell“One hears about life all the time from different people with very different narrative gifts.”
Anthony Powell“Self-love seems so often unrequited.”
Anthony Powell“Growing old is like being increasingly penalized for a crime you have not committed.”
Anthony Powell“Writing is a combination of intangible creative fantasy and appallingly hard work.”
Anthony Powell“She scarcely spoke at all and might have been one of those huge dolls which, when inclined backwards, say "Ma-ma" or "Pa-pa": though impossible to imagine in any position so undignified as that required for the mechanism to produce these syllables.”
Anthony Powell“Literature illuminates life only for those to whom books are a necessity.”
Anthony Powell“When people really hate one another, the tension within them can sometimes make itself felt throughout a room, like atmospheric waves, first hot, then cold, wafted backwards and forwards as if in an invisible process of air conditioning, creating a pervasive physical disturbance.”
Anthony Powell, The Valley of Bones