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Paperback
First published January 1, 1985
Assuming I do not lie, she wept with joy, although quite possibly she did so for some other reason.("Assuming I do not lie" is the best clause to start off any sentence)
The casual manner in which I loved my beloved, who was forever distinguishing herself by her utter absence, resembled a soft-swelling, enchanting sofa.Walter Benjamin writes an afterword to this book, and it has some great insights which I will now share with you. Exhibit 1.
For we can set our minds at rest by realizing that to write yet never correct what has been written implies both the absence of intention and the most fully considered intentionalityExhibit 2.
Everything seems to be on the verge of disaster; a torrent of words pours from him in which the only point of every sentence is to make the reader forget the previous one.Exhibit3.
The tears they shed are his prose. For sobbing is the melody of Walser's loquaciousness. It reveals to us where his favorite characters come from--namely, from insanity and nowhere else. They are figures who have left madness behind them, and this is why they are marked by such a consistently heartrending, inhuman superficiality.
It amuses me to believe that readers are, as it were, writers' chaperones; but even the most rigorous thinker may well have arrived perhaps at the surely capital insight that these lines of mine are autumnally fading—with which, in point of fact, their purpose has been fulfilled. [89]