Matthew > Matthew's Quotes

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  • #1
    Robert Musil
    “A man can't be angry at his own time without suffering some damage.”
    Robert Musil, The Man Without Qualities: Volume I

  • #2
    Thomas L. Friedman
    “Everything I’ve ever gotten in life is largely due to the fact that I was born in this country, America, at this time with these opportunities for its citizens. It is the primary obligation of our generation to turn over a similar America to our kids.”
    Thomas Friedman

  • #3
    Saul Bellow
    Ours is a bourgeois civilization. I am not using this term in its Marxian sense. Chicken! In the vocabularies of modern art and religion it is bourgeois to consider that the universe was made for our safe use and to give us comfort, ease, and support. Light travels at a quarter of a million miles per second so that we can see to comb our hair or read in the paper that ham hocks are cheaper than yesterday. De Tocqueville considered the impulse toward well-being as one of the strongest impulses of a democratic society. He can't be blamed for underestimating the destructive powers generated by this same impulse.
    Saul Bellow

  • #4
    Wendell Berry
    “The United States has 250 Billion tons of recoverable coal reserves - enough to last 100 years even at double the current rate of consumption.' We humans have inhabited the earth for many thousands of years, and now we can look forward to surviving for another hundred by doubling our consumption of coal? This is national security? The world-ending fire of industrial fundamentalism may already be burning in our furnaces and engines, but if it will burn for a hundred more years, that will be fine. Surely it would be better to intend straightforwardly to contain the fire and eventually put it out! But once greed has been made an honorable motive, then you have an economy without limits. It has no place for temperance or thrift or the ecological law of return. It will do anything. It is monstrous by definition.”
    Wendell Berry

  • #5
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “Say what you will of fortitude, but show me the man who can patiently endure the laughter of fools when they have obtained an advantage over him. 'Tis only when their nonsense is without foundation that one can suffer it without complaint.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #6
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “He who despises himself esteems himself as a self-despiser.”
    Friedrich Nietzsche

  • #7
    Bertrand Russell
    “If a man is offered a fact which goes against his instincts, he will scrutinize it closely, and unless the evidence is overwhelming, he will refuse to believe it. If, on the other hand, he is offered something which affords a reason for acting in accordance to his instincts, he will accept it even on the slightest evidence. The origin of myths is explained in this way.”
    Bertrand Russell

  • #8
    David Remnick
    “In the lobby, an old woman with legs wrapped in elastic bandages mopped the floor with filthy water. She kept missing the same spot, over and over. There was the overpowering smell of disinfectant, bad tobacco, and wet wool. This was the smell of Russia indoors, the smell of the woman in front of you on line, the smell of every elevator. Near an abandoned newsstand, dozens of overcoats hung on long rows of pegs, somber and dark, lightly steaming, like nags in a stable.”
    David Remnick, Lenin's Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire

  • #9
    Simone Weil
    “Imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy, monotonous, barren, boring. Imaginary good is boring; real good is always new, marvelous, intoxicating.”
    Simone Weil

  • #10
    “The termagant who had dragged him out on long, boring walks, who had tried in vain to censor his reading, who had labeled him an impious liar and criminal, was dead at last, and the boy, hearing a servant say 'she has passed away', sank to his knees on the kitchen floor to thank God for so great a deliverance.”
    Jonathan Keates, Stendhal

  • #11
    Simone Weil
    “Affliction hardens and discourages us because, like a red hot iron, it stamps the soul to its very depths with the scorn, the disgust, and even the self-hatred and sense of guilt that crime logically should produce but actually does not.”
    Simone Weil

  • #12
    Charles Baudelaire
    “I love Wagner, but the music I prefer is that of a cat hung up by its tail outside a window and trying to stick to the panes of glass with its claws.”
    Charles Baudelaire

  • #13
    Leo Durocher
    “Kid, show me a man who doesn't go down on his wife and I'll show you a man whose wife I can sleep with, tonight.”
    Leo Durocher

  • #14
    “We owe our fellow citizens something better than an institutional
    structure that allows their fates to depend so deeply on the brute
    luck of class origin.”
    Debra Satz

  • #15
    Robert Musil
    “For a long time now a hint of aversion had lain on everything he did and experienced, a shadow of impotence and loneliness, an all-encompassing distaste for which he could not find the complementary inclination. He felt at times as though he had been born with a talent for which there was at present no objective.”
    Robert Musil, The Man Without Qualities: Volume I

  • #16
    “What we call aid money serves only to strengthen the structures that generate poverty. Aid money never reaches those victims who, having lost their real assets, look for alternative ways of life outside the globalised system of production which are better suited to their needs.”
    Majid Rahnema , Quand La Misère Chasse La Pauvreté: Essai

  • #17
    Upton Sinclair
    “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”
    Upton Sinclair, I, Candidate for Governor: And How I Got Licked

  • #18
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “This is how philosophers should salute each other: ‘Take your time.”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

  • #19
    John Kenneth Galbraith
    “The process by which money is created is so simple that the mind is repelled.”
    John Kenneth Galbraith, Money: Whence It Came, Where It Went

  • #20
    Andrew S. Grove
    “Our fundamental economic beliefs, which we have elevated from a conviction based on observation to an unquestioned truism, is that the free market is the best of all economic systems—the freer the better. Our generation has seen the decisive victory of free-market principles over planned economies. So we stick with this belief, largely oblivious to emerging evidence that while free markets beat planned economies, there may be room for a modification that is even better.”
    Andy Grove

  • #21
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “Do I advise you to love thy neighbor? I suggest rather to escape from thy neighbor and to love those who are the farthest away from you. Higher than the love for thy neighbor is the love for the man who is distant and has still to come.”
    Friedrich Nietzsche

  • #22
    Pierre Bayle
    “There is not less wit nor less invention in applying rightly a thought one finds in a book, than in being the first author of that thought.”
    Pierre Bayle

  • #23
    Molière
    “Writing is like prostitution. First you do it for love, and then for a few close friends, and then for money.”
    Moli

  • #24
    Walker Percy
    “Suppose you ask God for a miracle and God says yes, very well. How do you live the rest of your life?”
    Walker Percy, Love in the Ruins

  • #25
    Søren Kierkegaard
    “Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.”
    Søren Kierkegaard , The Concept of Anxiety: A Simple Psychologically Orienting Deliberation on the Dogmatic Issue of Hereditary Sin

  • #26
    John Dos Passos
    Luther Burbank was born in a brick farmhouse in Lancaster Mass,
    he walked through the woods one winter
    crunching through the shinycrusted snow
    stumbling into a little dell where a warm spring was
    and found the grass green and weeds sprouting
    and skunk cabbage pushing up a potent thumb,
    He went home and sat by the stove and read Darwin
    Struggle for Existence Origin of Species Natural
    Selection that wasn't what they taught in church,
    so Luther Burbank ceased to believe moved to Lunenburg,
    found a seedball in a potato plant
    sowed the seed and cashed in on Darwin’s Natural Selection
    on Spencer and Huxley
    with the Burbank potato.

    Young man go west;
    Luther Burbank went to Santa Rosa
    full of his dream of green grass in winter ever-
    blooming flowers ever-
    bearing berries; Luther Burbank
    could cash in on Natural Selection Luther Burbank
    carried his apocalyptic dream of green grass in winter
    and seedless berries and stoneless plums and thornless roses brambles cactus—
    winters were bleak in that bleak
    brick farmhouse in bleak Massachusetts—
    out to sunny Santa Rosa;
    and he was a sunny old man
    where roses bloomed all year
    everblooming everbearing
    hybrids.

    America was hybrid
    America could cash in on Natural Selection.
    He was an infidel he believed in Darwin and Natural
    Selection and the influence of the mighty dead
    and a good firm shipper’s fruit
    suitable for canning.
    He was one of the grand old men until the churches
    and the congregations
    got wind that he was an infidel and believed
    in Darwin.
    Luther Burbank had never a thought of evil,
    selected improved hybrids for America
    those sunny years in Santa Rosa.
    But he brushed down a wasp’s nest that time;
    he wouldn’t give up Darwin and Natural Selection
    and they stung him and he died
    puzzled.
    They buried him under a cedartree.
    His favorite photograph
    was of a little tot
    standing beside a bed of hybrid
    everblooming double Shasta daisies
    with never a thought of evil
    And Mount Shasta
    in the background, used to be a volcano
    but they don’t have volcanos
    any more.”
    John Dos Passos, The 42nd Parallel

  • #27
    John Dos Passos
    “We work to eat to get the strength to work to eat to get the strength to work.”
    John Dos Passos

  • #28
    Willa Cather
    “The world is little, people are little, human life is little. There is only one big thing — desire.”
    Willa Cather, The Song of the Lark

  • #29
    Sylvia Townsend Warner
    “It is best as one grows older to strip oneself of possessions, to shed oneself downward like a tree, to be almost wholly earth before one dies.”
    Sylvia Townsend Warner, Lolly Willowes

  • #30
    Henry James
    “The only obligation to which in advance we may hold a novel, without incurring the accusation of being arbitrary, is that it be interesting.”
    Henry James



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