“ The unmistakable stigma of humanity touches all those impersonal and beautiful things that only youth ever grasps in their impersonal glory. ”
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Beautiful and Damned (1922). copy citation
Author | F. Scott Fitzgerald |
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Source | The Beautiful and Damned |
Topic | humanity youth |
Date | 1922 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | https://www.gutenberg.org/files/9830/9830-h/9830-h.htm |
Context
“It is in the twenties that the actual momentum of life begins to slacken, and it is a simple soul indeed to whom as many things are significant and meaningful at thirty as at ten years before. At thirty an organ-grinder is a more or less moth-eaten man who grinds an organ—and once he was an organ-grinder! The unmistakable stigma of humanity touches all those impersonal and beautiful things that only youth ever grasps in their impersonal glory. A brilliant ball, gay with light romantic laughter, wears through its own silks and satins to show the bare framework of a man-made thing—oh, that eternal hand!—a play, most tragic and most divine, becomes merely a succession of speeches, sweated over by the eternal plagiarist in the clammy hours and acted by men subject to cramps, cowardice, and manly sentiment.”
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