Best 8 quotes of Burton Rascoe on MyQuotes

Burton Rascoe

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    Burton Rascoe

    American literature has been, and is, singularly deficient in established critics who have anything like a rational conception of their jobs. The majority, initiate in a few of the patent rituals of Aristotle and Quintilian, don the forbidding robes of high priests to Sweetness and Light, and go about their business much as if the idea were to keep all they know to themselves.

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    Burton Rascoe

    A news sense is really a sense of what is important, what is vital, what has color and life - what people are interested in. That's journalism.

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    Burton Rascoe

    I am so constituted that I had rather read bad stuff than nothing.

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    Burton Rascoe

    I felt exactly like the man in the advertisement who has not devoted fifteen minutes a day to the study of the classics. If only (I thought) I had devoted fifteen minutes a day to the cultivation of the aesthetic attitude! I could bound Afghanistan.

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    Burton Rascoe

    Men and women who are lonely create. Those who are gregarious rarely do... Any poet would rather bed with a girl than write a poem about her. All art is the result of frustration. Art is energy deflected from its normal course in action.

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    Burton Rascoe

    What no wife of a writer can ever understand...is that a writer is working when he's staring out the window.

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    Burton Rascoe

    Buy books, then, that you have read with profit and pleasure and hope to read and reread. Buy books that you may underscore passages and write upon the margins, thus assuring yourself that the book is your own. Keep the books that mean the most to you close at hand, one or two, if possible, on a table at your bedside. Do not hide away your favorite books or keep them locked in enclosed shelves. Do not keep them under glass.

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    Burton Rascoe

    If you open a book and find that the writer is trying to impress you with his knowledge of long, unusual words or by his use of foreign phrases, close the book quickly with no sense of loss or of deficiency or of having missed anything; for the author has not learned how to write and perhaps never will, and there is no need for you to offer yourself as a sounding board for his incompetence.