Every writer is frustrated with trying to say more than language permits. Samuel Butler explains the problem:
We want words to do more than they can. We try to do with them what comes to very much like trying to mend a watch with a pickaxe or to paint a miniature with a mop; we expect them to help us to grip and dissect that which in ultimate essence is as ungrippable as shadow.
(Quoted on page 13 of Virginia Woolf, by Allen McLaurin. Cambridge University Press. 1973.)
For a brief biography of Samuel Butler, click here.
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