Top 15 Quotes & Sayings by F. L. Lucas

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English novelist F. L. Lucas.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
F. L. Lucas

Frank Laurence Lucas was an English classical scholar, literary critic, poet, novelist, playwright, political polemicist, Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and intelligence officer at Bletchley Park during World War II.

Poetry had far better imply things than preach them directly... in the open pulpit her voice grows hoarse and fails.
The most emphatic place in a clause or sentence is the end. This is the climax; and, during the momentary pause that follows, that last word continues, as it were, to reverberate in the reader's mind. It has, in fact, the last word.
The only hope I can see for the future depends on a wiser and braver use of the reason, not a panic flight from it. — © F. L. Lucas
The only hope I can see for the future depends on a wiser and braver use of the reason, not a panic flight from it.
The two World Wars came in part, like much modern literature and art, because men, whose nature is to tire of everything in turn... tired of common sense and civilization.
Most style is not honest enough.
A man can make himself put down what comes, even if it seems nauseating nonsense; tomorrow some of it may not seem wholly nonsense at all.
And how is clarity to be achieved? Mainly by taking trouble and by writing to serve people rather than to impress them.
At Munich we sold the Czechs for a few months grace, but the disgrace will last as long as history.
Apart from a few simple principles, the sound and rhythm of English prose seem to me matters where both writers and readers should trust not so much to rules as to their ears.
It seems to me as natural and necessary to keep notes, however brief, of one's reading, as logs of voyages or photographs of one's travels. For memory, in most of us, is a liar with galloping consumption.
This, indeed, is one of the eternal paradoxes of both life and literature-that without passion little gets done; yet, without control of that passion, its effects are largely ill or null.
The simile sets two ideas side by side; in the metaphor they become superimposed.
Since in the long run deception is likely to be found out, your character had better not only seem good, but be it.
I have a wife, I have sons; all these hostages have I given to fortune.
The more populous the world and the more intricate its structure, the greater must be its fundamental insecurity. A world-structure too elaborately scientific, if once disrupted by war, revolution, natural cataclysm or epidemic, might collapse into a chaos not easily rebuilt.
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