Quote by: George MacDonald

When I learn the meaning of a word, I know the word; but when I say to myself, 'I know the word,' there comes a reflection of the word back from the mirror of my mind, making a second impression, and after that I am at least not so likely to forget it...“When, then, I think about the impression that the word makes upon me, how it is affecting me with the knowledge of itself, then I am what I should call self-conscious of the word—conscious not only that I know the word, but that I know the phenomena of knowing the word—conscious of what I am as regards my knowing of the word.


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Author Bio


  • NameGeorge MacDonald
  • DescriptionScottish author, poet, and Christian minister
  • AliasesAuthor of Dealings with fairies,
  • BornDecember 10, 1824
  • DiedSeptember 18, 1905
  • CountryUnited Kingdom
  • ProfessionWriter; Minister; Poet; Novelist; Cleric
  • WorksLilith; Phantastes; David Elginbrod; The Princess And The Goblin; At The Back Of The North Wind