There’s the created work and there’s its creator, and Dorothy L. Sayers tells of their proper relationship:
The creator’s love for his work is not a greedy possessiveness; he never desires to subdue his work to himself but always to subdue himself to his work. The more genuinely creative he is, the more he will want his work to develop in accordance with its own nature, and to stand independent of himself.
(Quoted from page 171 of The Life of the Creative Spirit, by H. Charles Romesburg. Xlibris, 2001.)
For a brief biography of Dorothy L. Sayers, click here. For images of or relating Dorothy L. Sayers, click here.
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