To Rhoisin and Bruce Beresford and the getting of wisdom To Chester and John Cummings in memoriam Mark Boxer and Tom Weiskel and to Gabriella Rosselli del Turco where she lies sleeping Andromache led the lamentation of the women, while she held in her hands the head of Hector, her great warrior: ‘Husband, you are gone so young from life, and leave me in your home a widow. Our child is still but a little fellow, child of ill-fated parents, you and me. How can he grow up to manhood? Before that, this city shall be overthrown. For you are gone, you who kept watch over it, and kept safe its wives and their little ones . . . ‘And you have left woe unutterable and mourning to your parents, Hector; but in my heart above all others bitter anguish shall abide. Your hands were not stretched out to me as you lay dying. You spoke to me no living word that I might have pondered as my tears fell night and day.’ Iliad, xxiv, translated by S. E. Winbolt, from The Iliad Pocket Book, Constable 1911 I had already noticed with various people that the affectation of praiseworthy sentiments is not the only way of covering up reprehensible ones, but that a more up-to-date method is to put these latter on exhibition, so that one has the air of at least being forthright. Proust, Le Temps retrouve All censure of a man’s self is oblique praise. It is in order to show how much he can spare. Johnson I realise very well that the reader has no great need to know all this; but I need to tell him. Rousseau, Les Confessions I wear a suit of armour made of nothing but my mistakes. Pierre Reverdy, quoted by Ernst Jünger in Das zweite Pariser Tagebuch, 21 February 1943 I’ve never made any secret of the fact that I’m basically on my way to Australia. Support Your Local Sheriff
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