/Blushing/
heathfield, for heaven's sake, it's not like I read it in an actual
book or something... No, seriously, I've been keeping that quote (from a magazine) on my pin board for years and I'm not sure where it's from. Now that I've surfed around a bit for it, it seems he used and re-used it a lot, but below paragraph from
Guardian Unlimited expresses more (than I did in my question) about what he was talking about:
His clear intelligence led him to define the essential ambiguity at the heart of every work of art, thereby granting readers permission to enjoy and yet not fully understand: 'The imminence of a revelation that does not take place,' he wrote, 'is, perhaps, the aesthetic fact.'
jno and
Quizmonster, thank you for replying and for discussing with each other! I love it when people and/or their dictionaries slightly disagree about language; I feel that this actually furthers my understanding of a word rather than muddle it.
(jno, thanks for your kind words about my English. Alas I'm certain you'd be shocked if you could witness my live attempts at actually
speaking English, without my dictionaries at hand. You'd think it was my cat that had written my contributions to the AB...)