"The first war had ruined him. He had volunteered, though he was over military age and was fighting a country he loved; his health was broken, and he came back to a new literary world which had carefully eliminated him. For some of his later work he could not even find a publisher in England. No wonder he preferred to live abroad β in Provence or New York. But I don't suppose failure disturbed him much: he had never really believed in human happiness, his middle life had been made miserable by passion, and he had come through β with his humour intact, his stock of unreliable anecdotes, the kind of enemies a man ought to have, and a half-belief in a posterity which would care for good writing."
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Graham Greene, in "Ford Madox Ford," Collected Essays (1951), Part II: Novels and Novelists, p. 124 [Viking/Penguin, ]
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ford_Madox_Ford
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Ford Madox Ford
Ford Madox Ford (17.12.1873 β 26.06.1939), also known as Ford Madox Hueffer, was a British novelist, essayist, memoirist and publisher.
16 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Ford Madox Ford β
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