This sense of Incalculability, which has been aroused by the prodigious literary efflorescence of late years, reacts upon its cause; and the reaction tends by many different paths to express itself finally in the ventilation of problems that hinge about criticism.
"Aspects of Literature"
J. Middleton Murry
Tiny events-the peasant who eats minnows alive, the Jewish inn-keeper's brother who burned his six thousand roubles-take on a character of portent, except that the word is too harsh for so delicate a distortion of normal vision; rather it is a sense of Incalculability that haunts us.
"Aspects of Literature"
J. Middleton Murry