The Irish have always been famous for being the iconoclasts of the British isles. Less sensitive to verbal decorum than their detested lords, less inclined to pour their eyes upon the smooth moon or decipher the impermanence of rivers in long free-verse laments, they made deep incursions into the territory of English letters, pruning all rhetorical exuberance with frank impiety.
“
| — | Jorge Luis Borges, quoted by Colm Toibin in “Flann O’Brien’s Lies,” London Review of Books, 5 January 2012, pages 32-33. |
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