“The surest sign that a man has a genuine taste of his own is that he is uncertain of it.”

W.H. Auden

W.H. Auden - “The surest sign that a man has a genuine...” 1

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“A child's reading is guided by pleasure, but his pleasure is undifferentiated; he cannot distinguish, for example, between aesthetic pleasure and the pleasures of learning or daydreaming. In adolescence we realize that there are different kinds of pleasure, some of which cannot be enjoyed simultaneously, but we need help from others in defining them. Whether it be a matter of taste in food or taste in literature, the adolescent looks for a mentor in whose authority he can believe. He eats or reads what his mentor recommends and, inevitably, there are occasions when he has to deceive himself a little; he has to pretend that he enjoys olives or War and Peace a little more than he actually does. Between the ages of twenty and forty we are engaged in the process of discovering who we are, which involves learning the difference between accidental limitations which it is our duty to outgrow and the necessary limitations of our nature beyond which we cannot trespass with impunity. Few of us can learn this without making mistakes, without trying to become a little more of a universal man than we are permitted to be. It is during this period that a writer can most easily be led astray by another writer or by some ideology. When someone between twenty and forty says, apropos of a work of art, 'I know what I like,'he is really saying 'I have no taste of my own but accept the taste of my cultural milieu', because, between twenty and forty, the surest sign that a man has a genuine taste of his own is that he is uncertain of it. After forty, if we have not lost our authentic selves altogether, pleasure can again become what it was when we were children, the proper guide to what we should read.”

W.H. Auden
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“The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that it has never tried to contact us.”

Bill Watterson
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“For every traveller who has any taste of his own, the only useful guidebook will be the one which he himself has written.”

Aldous Huxley
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“Rascals are always sociable, and the chief sign that a man has any nobility in his character is the little pleasure he takes in others company.”

Arthur Schopenhauer
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“The wise man does not lay up his own treasures.The more he gives to others,the more he has for his own.”

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