“ Let a man doubt ever so much his own capacity for some public exhibition which he has undertaken; yet he will always prefer to fail,—if fail he must,—before a large audience. ”
Anthony Trollope, Phineas Redux (1874). copy citation
Author | Anthony Trollope |
---|---|
Source | Phineas Redux |
Topic | exhibition audience |
Date | 1874 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18640/18640-h/18640-h.htm |
Context
“An aptitude for such encounters is almost a necessary qualification for a popular leader in Parliament, as is a capacity for speaking for three hours to the reporters, and to the reporters only,—a necessary qualification for an Under-Secretary of State for India.
Phineas had the advantage of the temper of the moment in a House thoroughly crowded, and he enjoyed it. Let a man doubt ever so much his own capacity for some public exhibition which he has undertaken; yet he will always prefer to fail,—if fail he must,—before a large audience. But on this occasion there was no failure. That sense of awe from the surrounding circumstances of the moment, which had once been heavy on him, and which he still well remembered, had been overcome, and had never returned to him.”
source