"One of Dickens’s most striking peculiarities is that, whenever in his writing he becomes emotional, he ceases instantly to use his intelligence. The overflowing of his heart drowns his head and even dims his eyes; for, whenever he is in the melting mood, Dickens ceases to be able and probably ceases even to wish to see reality. His one and only desire on these occasions is just to overflow, nothing else. Which he does, with a vengeance and in an atrocious blank verse that is meant to be poetical prose and succeeds only in being the worst kind of fustian... Mentally drowned and blinded by the sticky overflowings of his heart, Dickens was incapable, when moved, of recreating, in terms of art, the reality which had moved him, was even, it would seem, unable to perceive that reality."
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Novelists from EnglandSocial activistsSocial criticsShort story writers from EnglandJournalists from England
Original Language: English
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Sources
Aldous Huxley. Collected Essays. Vulgarity in Literature.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Charles_Dickens
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Charles Dickens
1812 – 1870
britischer Schriftsteller
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