Showing posts with label Quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quotes. Show all posts

Saturday, July 15, 2023

A few words from John Dutton

I don't do quotes posts much nowadays, so why not ...

"Cowards rule the world these days. Coward's rules with coward's customs. To succeed today, all you got to know is how to blame and how to complain. I truly believe it's the survival of the un-fittest these days."

-- John Dutton (Kevin Costner) from the Yellowstone television show

Personally, I think Bob Howard could drink along with this one.

Wednesday, April 05, 2023

Whiskey and You

Been a long while since I've done a Quotes post, but fellow Kentuckian Chris Stapleton can't be missed by me. This is for his song "Whiskey and You." This isn't the whole song, but my favorite parts of it.

There's a bottle
On the dresser by your ring
And it's empty
So right now I don't feel a thing
I'll be hurting
When I wake up on the floor
But I'll be over it by noon
That's the difference between whiskey and you.

I've got a problem
But it ain't like what you think
I drink because I'm lonesome
And I'm lonesome 'cause I drink
But if I don't break down
And bring it on myself
It'll hit out of the blue
That's the difference between whiskey and you.

Thursday, November 19, 2020

The Dead South lyrics for 'Broken Cowboy'

I've fallen in love with this song recently, so here I present it's lyrics

Broken Cowboy


It's been a long, dark, dirty road
But a pocket full of gold
And I've been out here now
All on my own

Well it's real quiet here
Just the way I like it here
There's no one to bother me
Except

Well, in 1955,
born into Wadena's pride
I laid my head on that Milligan creek bed

When I was a young man
I helped build this land
Oh I, put down these rails
as a CPR man

Thought I'd live forever
With my heart in my pocket
Oh, my gun by my side
And my feelings in a locket

Well, that was a cold year in '77
But I married my wife
We had 2 kids

I gave her a daughter
She gave me a son
And oh, we rode those damn horses until we had none

Fists still like flyin'
Doing things for dyin'
Oh, I should have put that old gun away

But I, I am a broken cowboy
And I don't feel right no more
'Cause I am a broken cowboy

Livin' life in the fast lane
Racing cars and robbing trains
I thought I had it all
Then one day I got the call

A father's worst dream
My son went down and I

The colors deceive me
As I see grey
Oh, you're cutting me down with those
Cold words you're saying
Then you called me brother
But this can't be so cause you
Slander my name anywhere the wind will blow, oh

But I, I am a broken cowboy
And I don't feel right no more
'Cause I am a broken cowboy
Yes, I am a broken cowboy

It's been a long dark dirty road
But a pocket full of gold
And I've been out here now
All on my own
Well it's real quiet here
Just the way I like it here
There's no one to bother me
Except that old taunting tree

Monday, March 09, 2020

Wendell Berry quotes from 'The Long-Legged House'

"I had learned the value of silence in a place -- silence that is the imitation of absence, that permits one to be present as if absent, so that the life of the place goes its way undisturbed."

"A man should be in the world as though he were not in it, so that it will be no worse because of his life. His obligation may not be to make 'a better world,' but the world certainly requires of him that he make it no worse."

"Men who drudge all their lives in order to retire happily are the victim of a cheap spiritual fashion invented for their enslavement."

"I do not long to travel to Italy or Japan, but only across the river or up the hill into the woods."

"I seem to have been born with an aptitude for a way of life that was doomed, although I did not understand that at the time."

"Every man is followed by a shadow which is his death -- dark, featureless, and mute."

"We live in a fallen world by the dangerous presumption that we are unfallen."

"It is not from ourselves that we will learn to be better than we are."

"In spite of all the talk about the law of tooth and fang and the struggle for survival, there is in the lives of the animals and birds a great peacefulness. It is not all fear and flight, pursuit and killing. That is part of it, certainly ... But there is peace, too, and I think that the intervals of peace are frequent and prolonged."

"Although I have become, among other things, a teacher, I am skeptical of education. It seems to me a most doubtful process, and I think the good of it is taken too much for granted. It is a matter that is overtheorized and overvalued and always approached with too much confidence."

"A tyranny of fanatical peace lovers is as credible to me as a tyranny of militarists, and I don't think there would be any difference."

"Take a simpleton and give him power and confront him with intelligence -- and you have a tyrant."

"It is certain, I think, that the best government is the one that governs least. But there is a much-neglected corollary: the best citizen is the one who least needs governing. The answer to big government is not private freedom, but private responsibility."

"In spite of our repetitious outrage at the violence in our streets and slums, we spend seventy per cent of our revenue on weapons -- and so prove beyond doubt that we cannot imagine a better solution than violence."

"... there is undoubtedly a limit to how long private integrity can hold out in the face of, and within, public disintegration."

"With the world in our power and our power assigned to the moral authority of those who will profit most by its misuse, we continue to bless and congratulate ourselves upon the boyhood honesty of George Washington."

"There is good reason, for instance, to suspect that the foreign mission programs of certain Christian denominations have served as substitutes for decent behavior at home, or as excuses for indecent behavior at home ..."

"So long as government speaks with a fervent idealism it is free to prolong its inertia and to indulge in expedient corruptions."

"They go to the country to rest, only to reproduce there the noise, haste, confusion -- and, surely, the frustration -- of city traffic."

"To be worthy of admiration in any final sense, government help will have to accomplish the result of making itself unnecessary."

"If a man continues long in direct and absolute dependence on the government for the necessities of life, he ceases to be a citizen and becomes a slave."

"That the land and its people could have been so far brought down is explainable only by the failure of governors to govern and legislators to legislate and judges to judge in the interest of those they are sworn to serve -- only by the subservience of our governmental ideals to the stupidity and greed of officials who have been willing to justify, by a spurious rhetoric of free enterprise, the right of the rich to get richer, by any means, at anybody's expense."

"... the people who might have been expected to care most selflessly for the world have had their minds turned elsewhere -- to a pursuit of 'salvation' that was really only another form of gluttony and self-love, the desire to perpetuate their own small lives beyond the life of the world."

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Quote from Robert Downey Jr.

Haven't done a quote in a while, but maybe that's because I've not read or heard one. Well, heard this one today, and it struck me.

"Lives are saved by tough drill instructors, and in the absence of one, you have to be your own." -- Robert Downey Jr.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Quotes from 'Civil Disobedience,' by Henry David Thoreau

"The standing army is only an arm of the standing government."

"But a government in which the majority rule in all cases cannot be based on justice ..."

"He who gives himself entirely to his fellow-men appears to them useless and selfish; but he who gives himself partially to them is pronounced a benefactor and philanthropist."

"There is but little virtue in the action of masses of men."

"Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison."

"But the rich man ... is always sold to the institution which makes him rich."

"Is a democracy, such as we know it, the last improvement possible in government?"

Monday, September 16, 2013

Quotes from 'Walden,' by Henry David Thoreau

"The heroic books, even if printed in the character of our mother tongue, will always be in a language dead to degenerate times ..."

"But, wherever a man goes, men will pursue and paw him with their dirty institutions."

"I am convinced, that if all men were to live as simply as I then did, thieving and robbery would be unknown. These take place only in communities where some have got more than is sufficient while others have not enough."

"It is not all books that are as dull as their readers."

"I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude."

"... instead of studying how to make it worth men's while to buy my baskets, I studied rather how to avoid the necessity of selling them. The life which men praise and regard as successful is but one kind. Why should we exaggerate any one kind at the expense of the others?"

"We worship not the Graces, nor the Parcae, but Fashion. ... The head monkey at Paris puts on a traveller's cap, and all the monkeys in America do the same."

"... men have become the tools of their tools."

"We have built for this world a family mansion, and for the next a family tomb."

"The cart before the horse is neither beautiful nor useful."

"There is some of the same fitness in a man's building his own house that there is in a bird's building its own nest. Who knows but if men constructed their dwellings with their own hands, and provided food for themselves and families simply and honestly enough, the poetic faculty would be universally developed, as birds universally sing when they are so engaged? But alas! we do like cowbirds and cuckoos, which lay their eggs in nests which other birds have built ..."

"Our inventions are wont to be pretty toys, which distract our attention from serious things. They are but improved means to an unimproved end ..."

"As for the Pyramids (of Egypt), there is nothing to wonder at in them so much as the fact that so many men could be found degraded enough to spend their lives constructing a tomb for some ambitious booby, whom it would have been wiser and manlier to have drowned in the Nile, and then given his body to the dogs."

"I have since learned that trade curses every thing it handles ..."

"But I would say to my fellows, once for all, As long as possible live free and uncommitted. It makes but little difference whether you are committed to a farm or the county jail."

"Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity!"

"To a philosopher all news, as it is called, is gossip, and they who edit and read it are old women over their tea."

"The farmer can work alone in the field or the woods all day, hoeing or chopping, and not feel lonesome, because he is employed; but when he comes home at night he cannot sit down in a room alone, at the mercy of his thoughts, but must be where he can "see the folks," and recreate, and as he thinks remunerate, himself for his day's solitude; and hence he wonders how the student can sit alone in the house all night and most of the day without ennui and "the blues;" but he does not realize that the student, though in the house, is still at work in his field, and chopping in his woods, as the farmer in his ..."

"In a pleasant spring morning all men's sins are forgiven. Such a day is a truce to vice."

"... as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty poverty, nor weakness weakness."

"Most think that they are above being supported by the town; but it oftener happens that they are not above supporting themselves by dishonest means, which should be more disreputable."

"Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth."

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Aldous Huxley quotes from the novel 'Island'

"You're assuming," said Dr. Robert, "that the brain produces consciousness. I'm assuming that it transmits consciousness. And my explanation is no more farfetched than yours."

"Faith is something very different from belief. Belief is the systematic taking of unanalyzed words much too seriously. Paul's words, Mohammed's words, Marx's words, Hilter's words -- people take them too seriously, and what happens? What happens is the senseless ambivalence of history -- sadism vs. duty, or (incomparably worse) sadism as duty; devotion counterbalanced by organized paranoia; sisters of charity selflessly tending the victims of their own church's inquisitors and crusaders. Faith, on the contrary, can never be taken too seriously. For Faith is the empirically justified confidence in our capacity to know who in fact we are ..."

"... family ... It's freedom, if you like -- but freedom in a telephone booth."

"If your children take the idiocy seriously, they grow up to be miserable sinners. And if they don't take it seriously, they grow up to be miserable cynics. And if they react from miserable cynicism, they're apt to go Papist or Marxist. No wonder you have to have all those thousands of jails and churches ..."

"Perfect faith is defined as something that produces perfect peace of mind. But perfect peace of mind is something that practically nobody possesses. Therefore practically nobody possesses perfect faith. Therefore practically everybody is predestined to eternal punishment."

"A tale told by an idiot or a tale told by a Calvinist? Give me the idiot every time."

"People ... are at once the beneficiaries and the victims of their culture."

"We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is to learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way."

"The suffering of the stupid is as real as any other suffering."

"What's so funny?" she asked.
"Eternity," he answered. "Believe it or not, it's as real as shit."

"The awareness that one existed was an awareness that one was always alone."

"The work of a hundred years destroyed in a single night."

Saturday, June 08, 2013

T.H. White quotes from 'The Once and Future King'

I recently finished reading T. H. White's The Once and Future King, and I took note of several texts within the novel which I found of interest and worth pointing out to others. Here they go:

"The best thing for being sad," replied Merlin, beginning to puff and blow, "is to learn something. That is the only thing that never fails. You may grow old and trembling in your anatomies, you may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world about you devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honour trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then -- to learn."

Merlin to Arthur: "You have become the king of a domain in which the popular agitators hate each other for racial reasons, while the nobility fight each other for fun, and neither the racial maniac nor the overlord stops to consider the lot of the common soldier, who is the one person that gets hurt."

Elaine to Guenevere concerning Lancelot: "Yes, he is mad," she said. "You have won him, and you have broken him. What will you do with him next?"

Arthur: "Long ago, when I had my Merlyn to help, he tried to teach me to think. He knew he would have to leave in the end, so he forced me to think for myself. Don't ever let anybody teach you to think, Lance: it is the curse of the world."

Arthur: " ... when a moral sense begins to rot it is worse than when you had none."

Sir Lionel to Arthur: "You know," he said, "it's all very well to take up with morals and dogmas, so long as there is only yourself in it: but what are you to do when other people join the muddle?"

"Funny," said Lancelot, "how the people who can't pray say that prayers are not answered, however much the people who can pray say they are."

"But women are cruel in this way. They do not accept excuses."

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Mario Puzo quote from 'The Godfather'

"I have no intention of placing my fate in the hands of men whose only qualification is that they managed to con a block of people to vote for them." -- Mario Puzo, The Godfather

Saturday, February 02, 2013

Tolstoy quotes

I've not done a quotes listing in a while, and recent readings had some good ones.

The following quotes come from Leo Tolstoy's The Kingdom of God is Within You, which I just finished reading. I don't necessarily agree with all of Tolstoy's opinions, but I found these particular quotes interesting.

" ... the Church is holy; the Church was founded by Christ. God could not leave men to interpret his teaching at random -- therefore he founded the Church. ... those statements are so utterly untrue and unfounded that one is ashamed to refute them. Nowhere nor in anything, except in the assertion of the Church, can we find that God or Christ founded anything like what Churchmen understand by the Church. In the Gospels there is a warning against the Church, as it is an external authority, a warning most clear and obvious in the passage where it is said that Christ's followers should 'call no man master.' But nowhere is anything said of the foundation of what Churchmen call the Church."

"The follower of Christ, whose service means an evergrowing, understanding of his teaching, an ever-close fulfillment of it, in progress toward perfection, cannot, just because he is a follower of Christ, claim for himself or any other that he understands Christ's teaching fully and fulfills it."

" ... to assert of one's self or of anybody of men, that one is or they are in possession of perfect understanding and fulfillment of Christ's word, is to renounce the very spirit of Christ's teaching."

"The churches as churches are not, as many people suppose, institutions which have Christian principles for their basis ... The churches as churches, as bodies which assert their own infallibility, are institutions opposed to Christianity. There is not only nothing in common between the churches as such and Christianity, except the name, but they represent two principles fundamentally opposed and antagonistic to one another. One  represents pride, violence, self-assertion, stagnation, and death; the other, meekness, penitence, humility, progress, and life."

" ... the churches have never served as mediators between men and God. Such mediation is not wanted, and was directly forbidden by Christ, who has revealed his teaching directly and immediately to each man. But the churches set up dead forms in the place of God, and far from revealing God, they obscure him from men's sight."

"All that they preach is an external observance of the rites of idolatry."

"The man who has been instructed by the Church in the profane doctrine that a man cannot be saved by his own powers, but that there is another means of salvation, will infallibly rely upon this means and not on his own powers, which, they assure him, it is sinful to trust in."

"If a man can be saved by the redemption, by sacraments, and by prayer, then he does not need good works."

"If a man sincerely believes in the Sermon on the Mount, the Nicene Creed must inevitably lose all meaning and significance for him ..."

"This, then, is the work of the churches: to instill a false interpretation of Christ's teaching into men, and to prevent a true interpretation of it for the majority of so-called believers."

" ... however men may try to conceal it, one of the first conditions of Christian life is love, not in words but in deeds."

" ... we all know how our laws are made. We have all been behind the scenes, we know that they are the product of covetousness, trickery, and party struggles; that there is not and cannot be any real justice in them."

"People are astonished that every year there are sixty thousand cases of suicide in Europe ... but one ought rather to be surprised that there are so few. Every man of the present day, if we go deep enough into the contradiction between his conscience and his life, is in a state of despair. ... Not to speak of all the other contradictions between modern life and the conscience, the permanently armed condition of Europe together with its profession of Christianity is alone enough to drive any man to despair, to doubt of the sanity of mankind ... This contradiction ... is so terrible that to live and to take part in it is only possible if one does not think of it at -- if one is able to forget it."

" ... tomorrow some crazy ruler will say some stupidity, and another will answer in the same spirit, and then I must go expose myself to being murdered, and murder men -- who have done me no harm ..."

"The basis of authority is bodily violence."

"All the methods of appointing authorities that have been tried, divine right, and election, and heredity, and balloting, and assemblies and parliaments and senate -- have all proved ineffectual."

"Rulers always try to implicate as many citizens as possible in all the crimes committed in their support."

" ... while in former days a man who professed the religion of the Church could take part in all the crimes of the state, and profit by them, and still regard himself as free from any taint of sin ... nowadays all who do not believe in the Christianity of the Church, find similar well-founded irrefutable reasons in science for regarding themselves as blameless and even highly moral ..."

"A single fortune gained ... by any employment which trades on men's evil instincts ... corrupts men incomparably more than millions of thefts and robberies ..."

"... the hypocrisy of our society far surpasses the comparatively innocent hypocrisy of the Pharisees."

"Hypocrisy in our day is supported on two sides: by false religion and false science."

"A man cannot be placed against his will in a situation opposed to his conscience."

Monday, October 10, 2011

Jonathan Franzen quote

I have never read anything by author Jonathan Franzen, but I saw him on television recently and he had a quote I simply loved. When talking about religion, he said, "I worship at the altar of literature."

I like that. I really, really like that. I've been telling people for the longest time my religion is "books." And here Franzen has said it better than I ever could.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Harlan Ellison quote

"You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. No one is entitled to be ignorant."

Monday, July 11, 2011

A quote for me

Because I want to remember this ...

"We are kept from our goal not by obstacles, but by a clear path to a lesser goal." - Robert Brault

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Guns N' Roses lyrics

Coma is my favorite song from Guns N' Roses, though it's not a tune you'll hear on the radio, and not often in concert by the band because it is a difficult song to sing. In an interview, Axle Rose once said, "I think one of the best things that I've ever written was maybe the end segment of the song 'Coma.' " And I can understand why. It's an intensive song, and the ending can be quite gut wrenching to listen to.

Or, at least, that's how I feel about.

So, here are my favorite lyrics from the song, taken from that "end segment" Axle mentioned. I think it's his best writing to date. Make sense of it, if you can.

Coma

You live your life like it's a coma
So won't you tell me why we'd want to
With all the reasons you give it's
It's kind of hard to believe.

But who am I to tell you that I've
Seen any reason why you should stay,
Maybe we'd be better off
Without you anyway.

You got a one way ticket
On your last chance ride
Got a one way ticket
To your suicide,
Got a one way ticket
And there's no way out alive.

And all this crass communication
That has left you in the cold
Isn't much for consolation
When you feel so weak and old
But if home is where the heart is
Then there's stories to be told,
No you don't need a doctor
No one else can heal your soul.

Got your mind in submission
Got your life on the line
But nobody pulled the trigger
They just stepped aside
They be down by the water
While you watch them waving goodbye.

They be calling in the morning
They be hanging on the phone
They be waiting for an answer
When you know nobody's home
And when the bell's stopped ringing
It was nobody's fault but your own.

There were always ample warnings
There were always subtle signs
And you would have seen it coming
But we gave you too much time
And when you said
That no one's listening
Why'd your best friend drop a dime
Sometimes we get so tired of waiting
For a way to spend our time.

And it's so easy to be social
It's so easy to be cool
Yeah it's easy to be hungry
When you ain't got shit to lose
And I wish that I could help you
With what you hope to find
But I'm still out here waiting
Watching reruns of my life
When you reach the point of breaking
Know it's going to take some time
To heal the broken memories
That another man would need
Just to survive

Monday, July 05, 2010

Quotes from War and Peace by Tolstoy

From time to time I post some favorite quotes or song lyrics here on the Logical Misanthropy blog, and since I've been reading the Constance Garnett translation of War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, I thought I'd put up a few of my favorites quotes from this massive novel. Here goes:

"He suffered from an unlucky faculty ... the faculty of seeing and believing in the possibility of good and truth, and at the same time seeing too clearly the evil and falsity of life to be capable of taking serious part in it. Every sphere of activity was in his eyes connected with evil and deception. Whatever he tried to be, whatever he took up, evil and falsity drove him back again and cut him off from every field of energy. And meanwhile he had to live, he had to be occupied. It was too awful to lie under the burden of those insoluble problems of life, and he abandoned himself to the first distraction that offered, simply to forget them."

"Sometimes Pierre remembered what he had been told of soldiers under fire in ambuscade when they have nothing to do, how they try hard to find occupation so as to bear their danger more easily. And Pierre pictured all men as such soldiers trying to find a refuge from life: some in ambition, some in cards, some in framing laws, some in women, some in playthings, some in horses, some in politics, some in sport, some in wine, some in the government service."

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

John Gardner quotes from "On Moral Fiction"

I recently finished John Gardner's On Moral Fiction and found so many great quotes within, not all of which I agree with but still found interesting, I just had to share. They are below.

"Every hero's proper function is to provide a noble image for men to be inspired and guided by in their own actions."

"The gods set ideals, heroes enact them, and artists ... preserve the image as a guide for men."

"Real art creates myths a society can live instead of die by, and clearly our society is in need of such myths."

"Fantasy writing, of course, nearly always comments on the time and place that produced it ..."

"By its nature, criticism makes art sound more intellectual than it is ..."

"Art builds temporary walls against life's leveling force ... In corpses, entropy has won."

"... what we generally get in our books and films is bad instruction: escapist models or else moral evasiveness, or, worse, cynical attacks on traditional values such as honesty, love of country, marital fidelity, work, and moral courage. This is not to imply that such values are absolutes, too holy to attack. But it is dangerous to raise a generation that smiles at such values, or has never heard of them, or dismisses them with indignation, as if they were not relative goods but were absolute evils. The Jeffersonian assumption that truth will emerge where people are free to attack the false becomes empty theory if falsehood is suffered and obliged like an unwelcome -- or worse, an invited -- guest."

"We are beset, to an extent few people were before us, by doubts on every side; and the doubts are increased, if not partly introduced, by the moral relativism which naturally arises in a world of rapid communications and the sort of cultural interchange both invaluable and inescapable in the American melting pot."

"The traditional view is that true art is moral: it seeks to improve life, not debase it. It seeks to hold off, at least for a while, the twilight of the gods and us. I do not deny that art, like criticism, may legitimately celebrate the trifling. It may joke, or mock, or while away the time. But trivial art has no meaning or value except in the shadow of more serious art."

"For the most part our artists do not struggle -- as artists have traditionally struggled -- toward a vision of how things ought to be or what has gone wrong; they do not provide us with the flicker of lightning that shows us where we are. Either they pointlessly waste our time, saying and doing nothing, or they celebrate ugliness and futility, scoffing at good."

"We recognize true art by its careful, thoroughly honest search for and analysis of values. It is not didactic because, instead of teaching by authority and force, it explores, open-mindedly, to learn what it should teach."

"To worship the unique, the unaccountable and the freaky is -- if we're consistent -- to give up the right to say to our children, 'Be good.' "

"... morality has become, in many people's minds, an unattractive word ... . ... but the only thing wrong with morality ... is that it's frequently been used as a means of oppression ..."

"Tolstoy argues, in effect, ... that the ideal held up in a proper work of art comes from God ..."

"With the worship of Zeus substituted for Christianity, this is almost exactly Homer's position ... What the warrior-hero does on the battlefield, especially if he is half god, like Achilles, shows ordinary men what the gods love."

"Dante ... had ... come to the same discovery Aquinas had reached: that logical argument can support opposite and mutually exclusive conclusions with equal force, so that reason is at best ... a limited guide."

"In the name of democracy, justice, and compassion, we abandon our right to believe, to debate and to hunt down truth."

"The true critic knows that badness in art has to do not with the artist's interest or lack of interest in 'truth' but with his lack of truthfulness, the degree to which, for him, working at art is a morally indifferent act."

"... the interaction of characters is everying."

"Our more fashionable writers feel, as Chekhov and Tolstoy did not, that their art is unimporant; and they're correct."

"Religion's chief value is its conservatism: it keeps us in touch with what at least one section of humanity has believed for centuries. Art's chief value is that it takes nothing for granted."

"We need to stop excusing mediocre and downright pernicious art, stop "taking it for what it's worth" as we take our fast foods, our overpriced cars that are no good, the overpriced houses we spend all our lives fixing, our television programs, our schools thrown up like barricades in the way of young minds, our brainless fat religions, our poisonous air, our incredible cult of sports, and our ritual of fornicating with all pretty or even horse-faced strangers. We would not put up with a debauched king, but in a democracy all of us are kings, and we praise debauchery as pluralism."

"It is a fact of life that noble ideas, noble examples of human behavior, can drop out of fashion though they remain as real and applicable as ever -- can simply come to be forgotten, plowed under by 'progress.' "

"I would not claim that even the worst bad art should be outlawed, since morality by compulsion is a fool's morality and since, moreover, I agree with Tolstoy that the highest purpose of art is to make people good by choice. But I do think bad art should be revealed for what it is whenever it dares tostick its head up ..."

"It goes without saying, though I will say it anyway, that even the mostly lofty and respectable theories of human motivation -- from psychiatrists, biologists, theologians, and philosophers -- must always be treated by the serious writer as suspect."

"... the true artist is after 'glory,' as Faulkner said -- that is, the pleasure of noble achievement and good people's praise. The false artist is after power and the yawping flattery of his carnivore pack."

"Perfectly comfortable art is dead art, the product of an embalmed mind that has nothing to say to anyone, even the aesthetically dead."

"It can be shown by infallible or at least official logic that values are all a matter of opinion, that what seems good in one culture ... seems unpleasant to another. It can be proved positively that everything is relative. But not to an artist."

"... what ... artists care about -- what they rave or mourn or bitterly joke about -- is the forms of truth: justice, fairness, accuracy."

"... to write badly because otherwise one might not get published is useless compromise."

Monday, September 14, 2009

Robert E. Howard quote

Came across this great quote from pulp author Robert E. Howard. It's from a letter he wrote to a friend.

"When a nation forgets her skill in war, when her religion becomes a mockery, when the whole nation becomes a nation of money-grabbers, then the wild tribes, the barbarians drive in ... Who will be our invaders? From whence will they come?"

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Stephen King quotes

Okay, I finally have to do it. Here are some quotes from Stephen King, likely the best-known author in modern times. Some of this is from fiction, some not. Enjoy.

"Get busy living, or get busy dying. "

"God is cruel. Sometimes he makes you live."

"I am the literary equivalent of a Big Mac and Fries."

"I watched Titanic when I got back home from the hospital, and cried. I knew that my IQ had been damaged."

"Only enemies speak the truth; friends and lovers lie endlessly, caught in the web of duty."

"Talent is cheaper than table salt. What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work."

"When his life was ruined, his family killed, his farm destroyed, Job knelt down on the ground and yelled up to the heavens, 'Why god? Why me?' and the thundering voice of God answered, 'There's just something about you that pisses me off.' "

"The man in black fled across the desert, and the Gunslinger followed."

"Go then, there are other worlds than these."

"I believe the road to hell is paved with adverbs."

"If you don't have the time to read, you don't have the time or the tools to write."

"When a good writer is having fun, the audience is almost always having fun too."

"No one ever does live happily ever after, but we leave the children to find that out for themselves."

"You must not come lightly to the blank page."

"Life is not a support system for art. It is the other way around."

Sunday, January 04, 2009

George Orwell quotes

Considering I just finished a book by him, I figure it's time I listed some of my favorite quotes from British writer George Orwell. Some of these are from the book I just read, but many are not, some from non-fiction and others from fiction. Keep in mind most of these quotes were written during or right after World War II.

"Serious writers, I should say, are on the whole more vain and self-centered than journalists, though less interested in money."

"The opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude."

"When I sit down to write a book, I do not say to myself, 'I am going to produce a work of art.' I write it because there is some lie that I want to expose, some fact to which I want to draw attention, and my initial concern is to get a hearing."

"All writers are vain, selfish and lazy, and at the very bottom of their motives there lies a mystery."

"Good prose is like a window pane."

"As I write, highly civilized human beings are flying overhead, trying to kill me."

"In any case I find that by the time you have perfected any style of writing, you have always outgrown it."

"It is very rare to meet a foreigner, other than an American, who can distinguish between English and Scots or even English and Irish."

"It should be noted that there is now no intelligentsia that is not in some sense 'left.' "

"Patriotism and intelligence will have to come together again."

" 'Pure' pacifism ... can only appeal to people in very sheltered positions."

"An army of unemployed led by millionaires quoting the Sermon on the Mount -- that is our danger."

"However little we may like it, toughness is the price of survival."

"Patriotism has nothing to do with Conservatism."

"Many political words are similarly abused. ... Words of this kind are often used in a consciously dishonest way. That is, the person who uses them has his own private definition, but allows his hearer to think he means something quite different."

"In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defence of the indefensible."

"In prose, the worst thing you can do with words is to surrender them."

"Political language ... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind."

"Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket."

"All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred, comes invariably from people who are not fighting."

"During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."

"Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it."

"Enlightened people seldom or never possess a sense of responsibility."

"Four legs good, two legs bad."

"He was an embittered atheist, the sort of atheist who does not so much disbelieve in God as personally dislike Him."

"If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face -- forever."

"Liberal: a power worshipper without power."

"Men can only be happy when they do not assume that the object of life is happiness."

"On the whole, human beings want to be good, but not too good, and not quite all the time."

"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf."

"Prolonged, indiscriminate reviewing of books is a quite exceptionally thankless, irritating and exhausting job. It not only involves praising trash but constantly inventing reactions towards books about which one has no spontaneous feeling whatever."

"Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence. In other words, it is war minus the shooting."

"So much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot. "

"The atom bombs are piling up in the factories, the police are prowling through the cities, the lies are streaming from the loudspeakers, but the earth is still going round the sun. "

"The best books... are those that tell you what you know already."

"The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it."

"The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them."

"War against a foreign country only happens when the moneyed classes think they are going to profit from it."

"War is evil, but it is often the lesser evil."

"Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past."

"When it comes to the pinch, human beings are heroic."