Arthur Quiller-Couch



Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch (21 November 1863 – 12 May 1944) was a Cornish writer, who published under the pen name of Q.

Quotes

 * O pastoral heart of England! like a psalm Of green days telling with a quiet beat.
 * Poem Ode upon Eckington Bridge, River Avon, in Poems and Ballads, 1896


 * Only the heel Of splendid steel Shall stand secure on sliding fate, When golden navies weep their freight.
 * Poem The Splendid Spur


 * I could not find the way to God; There were too many flaming suns For signposts, and the fearful road Led over wastes where millions Of tangled comets hissed and burned— I was bewildered and I turned.
 * Poem The White Moth


 * Whenever you feel an impulse to perpetrate a piece of exceptionally fine writing, obey it—whole-heartedly—and delete it before sending your manuscript to press. Murder your darlings.
 * On the Art of Writing: Lectures Delivered in the University of Cambridge, 1913–1914
 * Often misattributed, e.g. to Hemingway, Faulkner, and others, or shortened to 'Kill your darlings.' source


 * All the old statues of Victory have wings: but Grief has no wings. She is the unwelcome lodger that squats on the hearthstone between us and the fire and will not move or be dislodged.
 * Armistice Day anniversary sermon (Cambridge, November 1923)

Oxford Book of English Verse, Introduction

 * And rather than make the book unwieldy I have eschewed notes—reluctantly when some obscure passage or allusion seemed to ask for a timely word; with more equanimity when the temptation was to criticize or 'appreciate.' For the function of the anthologist includes criticizing in silence.


 * I am mistaken if a single epigram included fails to preserve at least some faint thrill of the emotion through which it had to pass before the Muse's lips let it fall, with however exquisite deliberation.


 * The best is the best, though a hundred judges have declared it so; nor had it been any feat to search out and insert the second-rate merely because it happened to be recondite.