A man's action is only a picture book of his creed.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Fundamentally, all art is about human beings. You're always showing larger moral questions through the smaller moral, philosophical, or political choices through one character in the book.
Man is a make-believe animal: he is never so truly himself as when he is acting a part.
Man is the only creature whose emotions are entangled with his memory.
Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all.
What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.
The ordinary man is involved in action, the hero acts. An immense difference.
A man is the sum of his actions, of what he has done, of what he can do, Nothing else.
A man's work is nothing but this slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.
Man is the only creature that refuses to be what he is.
'Solomon Creed' is a man who knows everything about everything but nothing about himself and is on a journey of redemption to try and reclaim his identity.