A Sheaf

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A Sheaf
Galsworthy John
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" " I refuse to answer your hrst question, which 1 consider insolent. As to the second, which is also insolent, of what use is one's imagination, if not to gauge the experiences of others without experiencing them oneself ? " " My dear sir, imagination is not, believe me, a mere capacity for failing to grasp what you have not yourself experienced. It is an active quality, and even when stretched to the utmost is a little liable to fall short of the poignancy of experience. Let me remind you of ...Poe's tale about the man on whom the walls of a room gradually closed in. That tale, I am sure, made even you feel that his sufferings might not be 7iil — though I honestly believe it only roused you because it was so obviously romance. But do you think your imagination when you read the story really provided you with the intensity of the sensations of that man, especially at the moment when the walls were grinding his bones ?
" That was, as you say, romance. But you humani- tarians are always magnifying and distorting into the dreadful what is very ordinary experience ; your imaginations are your masters, not your servants.


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