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The Monday Morning Memo

“We are confronted by an interesting literary phenomenon: a literary hero losing gradually contact with the book that bore him; leaving his fatherland, leaving his creator’s desk and roaming space after roaming Spain. In result, Don Quixote is greater today than he was in Cervantes’s womb. He has ridden for three hundred and fifty years through the jungles and tundras of human thought – and he has gained in vitality and stature. We do not laugh at him any longer. His blazon is pity, his banner is beauty. He stands for everything that is gentle, forlorn, pure, unselfish, and gallant. The parody has become a paragon.”

– Prof. Vladimir Nabokov, Harvard, 1952

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Random Quote:

“I was twelve years old before I realized that not everybody does write, that there are people who find writing insuperably difficult, and that there are people who aspire powerfully to be writers but don’t know how to begin. I am frequently asked for advice by young people who are in this latter quandary, and all I can honestly tell them is that if they don’t know how to begin they had better reconsider their ambition to write. Beginning is simple. You write at the top of the page: “Once upon a time.” If nothing comes to mind to follow that introduction you are not a writer.”

- Robertson Davies, The Merry Heart, p. 55

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