The Last Time I Saw Paris Quotes
The Last Time I Saw Paris
by
Elliot Paul109 ratings, 4.12 average rating, 25 reviews
The Last Time I Saw Paris Quotes
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“A city one loves exists at no matter what distance, and its symphony is sometimes heard more clearly when one is away, as the music of an orchestra is more lucid to an audience that it sounds to the performers on the stage.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“One is impelled to glance across the table, and since you went away I have done that so often that my eyes must have worn some varnish from the empty chair.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“Voters in a so-called democracy may depose tyrants or crooks in isolated cases but they cannot give birth, full grown like Minerva, to honest and experienced statesmen to take their places.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“If there is contained in the works of Karl Marx an admonition to his followers to make life hard for themselves and to add to the almost insuperable difficulties attendant on social reform the handicap of offensive personalities, it has escaped my cursory examination. Nevertheless, in all the countries I have visited, and in the United States where I properly belong, the so-called Reds have conspired, perhaps unwittingly, with reactionary traitors and die-hards to place blame on Communists for all of man's ineptitudes and Nature's sorrows.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“...scientific education has run so far ahead of artistic culture and general knowledge that adults with the mentality of children are playing with phenomenally powerful toys...”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“Methods of clerical work in twentieth-century France would not have been tolerated in America in the earliest Colonial days, and surely not before then by the Indians.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
“By practicing the strictest economy and because of his odd jobs, the Fremonts were able to put aside a dowry for Yvonne, from their dollar a day, minus dues to the union. In 1920 the nest egg amounted to 2,000 francs ($286) and in 1926, to 4,500 francs ($100). Of such mathematics are world disasters made.”
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
― The Last Time I Saw Paris
