ARNOLD BENNETT QUOTES II

British novelist & playwright (1867-1931)

Literature's always a good card to play for Honours. It makes people think that Cabinet ministers are educated.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Title

Tags: literature


To the artist is sometimes granted a sudden, transient insight.... A flash, and where previously the brain held a dead fact, the soul grasps a living truth! At moments we are all artists.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett


The manner in which one single ray of light, one single precious hint, will clarify and energize the whole mental life of him who receives it, is among the most wonderful and heavenly of intellectual phenomena.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Literary Taste: How to Form It


When you are born you are done for, in the matter of your temperament. The colour of your eyes may alter, generally does; but your temperament won't. It will show itself in your last breath.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life


The chances are that you have already come to believe that happiness is unattainable. But men have attained it. And they have attained it by realizing that happiness does not spring from the procuring of physical or mental pleasure, but from the development of reason and the adjustment of conduct to principles.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day


Pessimism, when you get used to it, is just as agreeable as optimism. Indeed, I think it must be more agreeable, must have a more real savor, than optimism--from the way in which pessimists abandon themselves to it.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Things That Have Interested Me

Tags: pessimism


And, having once decided to achieve a certain task, achieve it at all costs of tedium and distaste. The gain in self-confidence of having accomplished a tiresome labour is immense.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day


The manner of his life was of no importance. What affected her was that he had once been young. That he had grown old, and was now dead. That was all. Youth and vigour had come to that. Youth and vigour always came to that. Everything came to that.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Old Wives' Tale

Tags: death


Essential characteristic of the really great novelist: a Christ-like, all-embracing compassion.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett


Being a husband is a whole-time job. That is why so many husbands fail. They can't give their entire attention to it.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Title


If you are not prepared for discouragements and disillusions; if you will not be content with a small result for a big effort, then do not begin. Lie down again and resume the uneasy doze which you call your existence.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Best of Arnold Bennett


In a woman whose chief capital is her beauty, to be forty is a crime against society.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Gates of Wrath

Tags: women


Happiness includes chiefly the idea of satisfaction after full honest effort. No one can possibly be satisfied and no one can be happy who feels that in some paramount affairs he failed to take up the challenge of life.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Self and Self-Management

Tags: happiness


Who am I to judge? Who are you to pass verdicts? Who puts us on the bench? Have we heard all the evidence, or the hundredth part of it? Is there any possibility of us doing so? Are we not all equally in the dock? There is something tragically comic about the spectacle of one human being judging another.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life


The pleasure of doing a thing in the same way at the same time every day, and savoring it, should be noted.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Journal of Arnold Bennett


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


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


Good taste is better than bad taste, but bad taste is better than no taste, and men without individuality have no taste--at any rate no taste that they can impose on their publics.

ARNOLD BENNETT

Evening Standard, August 21, 1930


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

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Make the Best of Life

Tags: duty


A failure or so, in itself, would not matter, if it did not incur a loss of self-esteem and of self-confidence. But just as nothing succeeds like success, so nothing fails like failure.

ARNOLD BENNETT

How to Live on 24 Hours a Day

Tags: failure