[This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald]@TWC D-Link book
This Side of Paradise

CHAPTER 5
20/54

He began for the first time in his life to have a strong distrust of all generalities and epigrams.

They were too easy, too dangerous to the public mind.

Yet all thought usually reached the public after thirty years in some such form: Benson and Chesterton had popularized Huysmans and Newman; Shaw had sugar-coated Nietzsche and Ibsen and Schopenhauer.

The man in the street heard the conclusions of dead genius through some one else's clever paradoxes and didactic epigrams.
Life was a damned muddle...

a football game with every one off-side and the referee gotten rid of--every one claiming the referee would have been on his side....
Progress was a labyrinth...


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