• George Orwell The four great motives for writing prose are sheer egoism, esthetic enthusiasm, historical impulse, and political purpose.
    George Orwell
    English writer (ps. of Eric Blair) 1903-1950
    - +
     0
Loading...
George Orwell - The four great motives for writing prose are sheer egoism, esthetic enthusiasm, historical impulse, and political purpose.
The four great motives for writing prose are sheer egoism, esthetic enthusiasm, historical impulse, and political purpose. by : George Orwell
X
plant-drops forest hills-sunrise lake-forest mountains-with-lake purple-flower river-forest road-with-clouds sky-stars straat-stad sun-over-waterfall yellow-wheat z-love-children-sun z-love-geliefdes-zon z-love-hands-sun z-love-hands z-love-leaves z-love-parijs z-love-small-hearts z-love-zwanen

Font size:

20 px 24 px 28 px 32 px 40 px 48 px

Font type:

Arial TNR Verdana Courier New Comic Monospace

Color:

White Blue Red Yellow Green Black

Shade:

None White Black
plant-drops The four great motives for writing prose are sheer egoism, esthetic enthusiasm, historical impulse, and political purpose.
- George Orwell Greatest-Quotations.com