Randall Jarrell Quote

Malraux writes in a language in which there is no way to say "perhaps" or "I don't know," so that after a while we grow accustomed to saying it for him.


"Malraux and the Statues at Baumberg," Art News (December 1953) [p. 180] - Kipling, Auden & Co: Essays and Reviews 1935-1964 (1980)


Malraux writes in a language in which there is no way to say perhaps or I don't know, so that after a while we grow accustomed to saying it for him.

Malraux writes in a language in which there is no way to say perhaps or I don't know, so that after a while we grow accustomed to saying it for him.

Malraux writes in a language in which there is no way to say perhaps or I don't know, so that after a while we grow accustomed to saying it for him.

Malraux writes in a language in which there is no way to say perhaps or I don't know, so that after a while we grow accustomed to saying it for him.