For it is humanly certain that most of us remember very little of what we have read. To open almost any book a second time is to be reminded that we … - Siegfried Sassoon

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For it is humanly certain that most of us remember very little of what we have read. To open almost any book a second time is to be reminded that we had forgotten well-nigh everything that the writer told us. Parting from the narrator and his narrative, we retain only a fading impression; and he, as it were, takes the book away from us and tucks it under his arm.

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About Siegfried Sassoon

Siegfried Sassoon (September 8, 1886 – September 1, 1967) was a British poet and writer, best remembered for the poems he wrote as a soldier in World War I. Decorated for bravery on the Western Front, he became one of the leading poets of the First World War.

Biography information from Wikiquote

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Siegfried Loraine Sassoon Saul Kain Pinchbeck Lyre Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon
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Additional quotes by Siegfried Sassoon

I believe that this war, upon which I entered as a war of defense and liberation, has now become a war of aggression and conquest.

"The phrase "after-life" was also vaguely confused with going to church and not wanting to be dead - a perplexity which can be omitted from a narrative in which I am doing my best to confine myself to actual happenings. At the age of twenty-two I believed myself to be unextinguishable."

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The art of poetry belongs to life; one lives for it just as other people live for their essential vocations of whatever kind they may be. It is one’s earthly home, and the other poets, dead or living, when masters of the art, are one’s housemates.

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