Quotes Tagged "zeitgeist"
Novelists,â said Ivo, âare to the nineties what cooks were to the eighties, hairdressers to the seventies and pop-stars to the sixties⊠Merely, you know, an expression of the Zeitgeist, Nobody actually reads novels any more, but itâs a fashionable thing to be a novelist â as long as you donât entertain people of course. I sometimes think,â said Ivo, his eyes like industrial diamonds, âthat my sole virtue is, Iâm the only person in London who has no intention of writing any kind of novel, ever.
In his person Gascoigne showed a curious amalgam of classes, high and low. He had cultivated his mind with the same grave discipline with which he now maintained his toiletteâwhich is to say, according to a method that was sophisticated, but somewhat out of date. He held the kind of passion for books and learning that only comes when one has pursued an education on oneâs very ownâbut it was a passion that, because its origins were both private and virtuous, tended towards piety and scorn. His temperament was deeply nostalgic, not for his own past, but for past ages; he was cynical of the present, fearful of the future, and profoundly regretful of the worldâs decay. As a whole, he put one in mind of a well-preserved old gentleman (in fact he was only thirty-four) in a period of comfortable, but perceptible, declineâa decline of which he was well aware, and which either amused him or turned him melancholy, depending on his moods.