3 Quotes & Sayings By Bernard Knox

Bernard Knox is an internationally renowned writer and broadcaster. He studied history at Trinity College, Cambridge, and pursued further studies in history and politics at Carleton University, Ottawa. He worked in television in Canada until 1977 and then went freelance, specialising in military and naval history. He has written ten books on the Napoleonic Wars and the Crimean War; twenty-one books on British and European history; and five books on military and naval history Read more

He has also written three books on the Second World War: The Mediterranean Strategy (1989), Crete 1941 (1993), and Hitler's Army (1994). His latest book is The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East (2011).

1
If through no fault of his own the hero is crushed by a bulldozer in Act II, we are not impressed. Even though life is often like this–the absconding cashier on his way to Nicaragua is killed in a collision at the airport, the prominent statesman dies of a stroke in the midst of the negotiations he has spent years to bring about, the young lovers are drowned in a boating accident the day before their marriage–such events, the warp and woof of everyday life, seem irrelevant, meaningless. They are crude, undigested, unpurged bits of reality–to draw a metaphor from the late J. Edgar Hoover, they are “raw files.” But it is the function of great art to purge and give meaning to human suffering, and so we expect that if the hero is indeed crushed by a bulldozer in Act II there will be some reason for it, and not just some reason but a good one, one which makes sense in terms of the hero’s personality and action. In fact, we expect to be shown that he is in some way responsible for what happens to him. Bernard Knox
2
The same touchy sense of personal honor that is at the root of Achilles' wrath still governs relations between man and man in modern Greece; Greek society still fosters in the individual a fierce sense of his privileges, no matter how small, of his rights, no matter how confined, of his personal worth, no matter how low. And to defend it, he will stop, like Achilles, at nothing. Bernard Knox