Greg > Greg's Quotes

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  • #1
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    “Evil indeed is the man who has not one woman to mourn him.”
    Arthur Conan Doyle, The Hound of the Baskervilles

  • #2
    Dave Eggers
    “First of all, I know it’s all people like you. And that’s what’s so scary. Individually you don’t know what you’re doing collectively.”
    Dave Eggers, The Circle

  • #3
    Charles Bukowski
    “you didn't adjust, you simply got more and more tired”
    Charles Bukowski, Post Office

  • #4
    John  Williams
    “Sometimes, immersed in his books, there would come to him the awareness of all that he did not know, of all that he had not read; and the serenity for which he labored was shattered as he realized the little time he had in life to read so much, to learn what he had to know.”
    John Williams, Stoner

  • #5
    John  Williams
    “A war doesn’t merely kill off a few thousand or a few hundred thousand young men. It kills off something in a people that can never be brought back. And if a people goes through enough wars, pretty soon all that’s left is the brute, the creature that we—you and I and others like us—have brought up from the slime.”
    John Williams, Stoner
    tags: war

  • #6
    John  Williams
    “You, too, are cut out for failure; not that you’d fight the world. You’d let it chew you up and spit you out, and you’d lie there wondering what was wrong. Because you’d always expect the world to be something it wasn’t, something it had no wish to be. The weevil in the cotton, the worm in the beanstalk, the borer in the corn. You couldn't face them, and you couldn't fight them; because you’re too weak, and you’re too strong. And you have no place to go in the world.”
    John Williams, Stoner

  • #7
    Osamu Dazai
    “One of my tragic flaws is the compulsion to add some sort of embellishment to every situation—a quality which has made people call me at times a liar—but I have almost never embellished in order to bring myself any advantage; it was rather that I had a strangulating fear of that cataclysmic change in the atmosphere the instant the flow of a conversation flagged, and even when I knew that it would later turn to my disadvantage, I frequently felt obliged to add, almost inadvertently, my word of embellishment, out of a desire to please born of my usual desperate mania for service. This may have been a twisted form of my weakness, an idiocy, but the habit it engendered was taken full advantage of by the so-called honest citizens of the world.”
    Osamu Dazai, No Longer Human

  • #8
    Franz Kafka
    “You see, Willem, he admits that he doesn't know the Law and yet he claims he's innocent.”
    Franz Kafka, The Trial
    tags: law

  • #9
    John Steinbeck
    “I wonder how many people I've looked at all my life and never seen.”
    John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent



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