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But after all, what have we to do with taverns? Real menace belongs to the drawing-room.
E. M. Forster
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E. M. Forster
Age: 91 †
Born: 1879
Born: January 1
Died: 1970
Died: June 7
Biographer
Essayist
Librettist
Literary Critic
Novelist
Science Fiction Writer
Screenwriter
Writer
London
England
Edward Morgan Forster
E Forster
EM Forster
Rooms
Class
Society
Real
Taverns
Menace
Belongs
Drawing
Room
More quotes by E. M. Forster
It's not what people do to you, but what they mean, that hurts.
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Beauty ought to look a little surprised: it is the emotion that best suits her face. The beauty who does not look surprised, who accepts her position as her due - she reminds us too much of a prima donna.
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Life is a public performance on the violin, in which you must learn the instrument as you go along.
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The present flowed by them like a stream. The tree rustled. It had made music before they were born, and would continue after their deaths, but its song was of the moment. The moment had passed. The tree rustled again. Their senses were sharpened, and they seemed to apprehend life. Life passed. The tree rustled again.
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The people I respect most behave as if they were immortal and as if society was eternal. Both assumptions are false: both of them must be accepted as true if we are to go on eating and working and loving, and are to keep open a few breathing holes for the human spirit.
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Railway termini are our gates to the glorious and the unknown
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It is the function of the novelist to reveal the hidden life at its source: to tell us more about Queen Victoria than could be known, and thus to produce a character who is not the Queen Victoria of history.
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One has two duties - to be worried and not to be worried.
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I believe in teaching people to be individuals, and to understand other individuals.
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It is my fate and perhaps my temperament to sign agreements with fools.
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It is thus, if there is any rule, that we ought to die--neither as victim nor as fanatic, but as the seafarer who can greet with an equal eye the deep that he is entering, and the shore that he must leave.
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The bully and his victim never quite forget their first relations.
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The more highly public life is organized the lower does its morality sink.
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Ulysses ... is a dogged attempt to cover the universe with mud, an inverted Victorianism, an attempt to make crossness and dirt succeed where sweetness and light failed, a simplification of the human character in the interests of Hell.
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Do you suppose there's any difference between spring in nature and spring in man? But there we go, praising the one and condemning the other as improper, ashamed that the same laws work eternally through both.
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One person with passion is better than forty people merely interested.
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How can I know what I think till I see what I say?
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I would rather be a coward than brave because people hurt you when you are brave.
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One marvels why the middle classes still insist on so much discomfort for their children at such expense to themselves.
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