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- The Blaze of Obscurity
- North Face of Soho
- The Revolt of the Pendulum
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- On Modern Australian Painting
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- Perfectly Bad Sentence
- Insult to the Language
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- Starting with Sludge
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- The Writer's Revenge
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- Saying Famous Things
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- Kingsley Amis Biography
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- Happiness Writes White
- The Meaning of Recognition
- Angels Over Elsinore
- Opal Sunset
- The Book of My Enemy
- As Of This Writing
- Cultural Amnesia
- Books Out of Print




Usually attributed to that prolific aphorist Anonymous, the sadly true notion that "Happiness writes white" probably emerged from Tin Pan Alley or Broadway, when somebody finally realised why most of the good love songs were about love lost. The idea might seem to conform to the standard Romantic conception of poetry, but it is important to remember that the Romantic conception was a real discovery of something that had always been true: art is an outward integration inspired by the artist's inner disintegration.
Fragonard in the second rank merely for suggesting that Arcadia can be an unmixed pleasure and go on forever: although it could be said that the melancholy of monarchical absolutism imposing its requirements somehow seeps through to give even manufactured bliss an undertone of menace. Besides, Fragonard's pretty girl reading her book will grow old and die: we know that, and we know he knows that, or he would not have been so seized with the beauty of her concentration. French painting and music are copious with what we would call the merely lovely but we can be confident about bringing our own unhappiness to the picture or the composition even when they are careful to avoid any of their own.