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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Part:         Session:         Page of 912

Of course, the writer has very little profit out of a dollar book, but it would have a large sale. Doubleday doesn't want to print it. They're printing Aristotle and Plato, and things like that. Of course, they don't have to pay them any royalties, but they don't have to pay me much of any royalty--I mean a quarter of a cent, I think, a copy. It's a very, very trifling royalty that people get on paperbounds, but it would be a large sale, and I'm anxious to see it but into circulation. (Material omitted here as requested.)

Interviewer:

you have a much higher opinion of Lewis then most people.

Perkins:

Well, I never saw his irritabilities. I heard about them secondhand.

Interviewer:

You apparently do not stress his drive for power to the extent that others do.

Perkins:

Well, I never know what anybody means by “drive for power.” Every human being is touched with a grasping for power--if not over the world, then over his family or over his child or over his subordinates, or over somebody. It's just a natural pattern. Now, Lewis may have had a little more of it than others. I think be believed in himself, you know. He had great confidence in himself. I don't think he had very much humility in his nature. I've said





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