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Quotes

Time is a veil interposed between God and ourselves, as our eyelid is between our eye and the light.

—François-René de Chateaubriand, c. 1820

The past is always tense and the future, perfect.

—Zadie Smith, 2000

We should not say that one man’s hour is worth another man’s hour, but rather that one man during an hour is worth just as much as another man during an hour. Time is everything, man is nothing; he is, at most, time’s carcass.

—Karl Marx, 1847

Time rushes toward us with its hospital tray of infinitely varied narcotics, even while it is preparing us for its inevitably fatal operation.

—Tennessee Williams, 1951

Those who make the worst use of their time are the first to complain of its brevity.

—Jean de La Bruyère, 1688

Time’s ruins build eternity’s mansions.

—James Joyce, 1922

Scars have the strange power to remind us that our past is real.

—Cormac McCarthy, 1992

Nothing puzzles me more than time and space, and yet nothing puzzles me less, for I never think about them.

—Charles Lamb, 1810

We wish away whole years, and travel through time as through a country filled with many wild and empty wastes, which we would fain hurry over, that we may arrive at those several little settlements or imaginary points of rest which are dispersed up and down in it.

—Joseph Addison, 1711

A watch is always too fast or too slow. I cannot be dictated to by a watch.

—Jane Austen, 1814

The appointed thing comes at the appointed time in the appointed way.

—Myrtle Reed, 1910

My stern chase after time is, to borrow a simile from Tom Paine, like the race of a man with a wooden leg after a horse.

—John Quincy Adams, 1844

No preacher is listened to but time, which gives us the same train and turn of thought that elder people have in vain tried to put into our heads before.

—Jonathan Swift, 1706