C.S. Lewis on Newspapers
Surprised by Joy (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: 1955), 159.
Even in peacetime I think those are very wrong who say that schoolboys
should be encouraged to read the newspapers. Nearly all that a boy
reads there in his teens will be seen before he is twenty to have been
false in emphasis and interpretation, if not in fact as well, and most
of it will have lost all importance. Most of what he remembers he will
therefore have to unlearn; and he will probably have acquired an
incurable taste for vulgarity and sensationalism and the fatal habit of
fluttering from paragraph to paragraph to learn how an actress has been
divorced in California, a train derailed in France, and quadruplets
born in New Zealand.
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