Knowing what you can not do is more important than knowing what you can do. In fact, that's good taste.
People seldom refuse help, if one offers it in the right way.
One's mind has a way of making itself up in the background, and it suddenly becomes clear what one means to do.
As I make my slow pilgrimage through the world, a certain sense of beautiful mystery seems to gather and grow.
I am sure it is one's duty as a teacher to try to show boys that no opinions, no tastes, no emotions are worth much unless they are one's own. I suffered acutely as a boy from the lack of being shown this.
I read the newspaper avidly. It is my one form of continuous fiction.
Very often a change of self is needed more than a change of scene.